Habetia imitatrix Karny, 1912

Ingrisch, Sigfrid, 2021, Revision of the genera Habetia Kirby, 1906 and Parahabetia gen. nov. from New Guinea (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae, Conocephalinae, Agraeciini), Zootaxa 5020 (2), pp. 201-256 : 209-210

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5020.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4FF882DF-334F-49C8-A576-4192B5F2654C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5223209

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FA08E75D-AA37-8057-FDC0-30499440699D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Habetia imitatrix Karny, 1912
status

 

Habetia imitatrix Karny, 1912 View in CoL

Figs 8A View FIGURE 8 , 11E View FIGURE 11 , 12F–I View FIGURE 12 , 14F View FIGURE 14 , 18D View FIGURE 18 , Map 1(2).

Holotype (male): Papua New Guinea: Madang, labeled “ K. Wilhelm-Land, Bongu”, (5°29’S, 145°49’E), about 1910, collector and date not stated—depository: Senckenberg Museum für Tierkunde Dresden ( SMTD). GoogleMaps

Discussion. The only known specimen of H. imitatrix , the male holotype, is in general characters very similar to the type of H. spada , a female. Both taxa are known from a single specimen each. The type localities of both taxa are located very close to each other or are maybe identic: Konstantinhafen has been one of the old German settlements in New Guinea, while Bongu is not a locality but the name of a tribe living in the area about 30 km South of Madang ( Hempenstall 2016), that is close to Enke Port. Karny (1912) might have been not aware of these facts when he described H. imitatrix . This raises the question if the female type of H. spada and the male type of H. imitatrix might belong to the same species. However, there are localities that house two different species of the genus Habetia . Moreover, both taxa are known from a single specimen, and these specimens are of the opposite sex. It is thus better to wait with any nomenclatural changes until more specimens of both taxa become available to solve this question, preferably male and female found together.

Diagnosis. The male of H. imitatrix is unique for the shape of the subgenital plate that has the central area prolonged behind and that area shaped like a hood that carries on apico-dorsal margin a row of teeth of decreasing size toward end, and the styli project laterally from the subgenital plate not from apical margin as in all other species ( Figs 12F View FIGURE 12 , 14F View FIGURE 14 ).

Description. General habitus of the genus. Coloration of face of general color; mandibles fully black; antennal scrobae with indistinctly darkened spot at ventro-internal angle. Femora with the following number of spines on ventral margins: (1) a 6 p 6; (2) a 7 p 3; (3) a 9–12 p ca 11 (n = 1).

Male. Stridulatory file on underside of left tegmen with a distinct step in distal area; file length 2.50 mm with 78 teeth, of which narrow curved basal area 0.25 mm with 8 teeth, central area 1.58 mm with 37 teeth, step 0.15 mm with 5 teeth, narrow apical area 0.54 mm with 28 teeth ( Fig. 18D View FIGURE 18 ). Tenth abdominal tergite with convex surface; from hind margin with a long and narrow oval incision closed from behind by projecting acute angles from tip of resulting gap. Cerci moderately curved and little narrowing towards end; from little before mid-length with a dorso-ventrally compressed inner ridge that widens to a wide and compressed internal process, which divides towards end into two compressed, wide, and little curved lobes, the proximal branch little larger than the distal branch, both with a minute denticle at tip, the proximal branch also with a dorsal carina from base of process; inner surface of cercus between these projections and upper margin little concave and terminated dorsally by a narrow rim ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ). Subgenital plate roughly semi-circular with a long and narrow medial projection; in ventral view deeply incised from base and membranous between resulting oblique anterior margins; sclerotized area with convex and later concave lateral margins forming a long and narrow apical projection with a fine medial carina and acute and laterally compressed tip; this rather high and towards ventral margin laterally compressed projection obviously results from a widened fusion of the dorsal lateral margins with the ventral, medial carina, it is in lateral view obliquely truncate at end and carries 3 larger transverse teeth in upper and a few minute denticles in lower area ( Figs 11E View FIGURE 11 , 12F View FIGURE 12 , 14F View FIGURE 14 ). Titillators mostly black; at base little recurved and with narrowing margins, then straight and approaching each other; before performing a curvature slightly widened and diverging, then performing a more than 180° curve, in apical area straight with parallel margins and truncate but with shortly recurved tip ( Figs 12G–I View FIGURE 12 ); lateral sclerites elongate, of same color as titillators, with rounded ends and a small notch in about mid-length.

Female unknown.

Measurements (1 male).—Body w/o wings: 35; pronotum: 9.3; tegmen: 33.5; hind femur: 24.5 mm.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Tettigoniidae

Genus

Habetia

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