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Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5071 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-446
Author(s):  
MENG-QI WANG ◽  
YAO DENG ◽  
DE-LONG GUAN ◽  
BEN-YONG MAO ◽  
MIAO LI

A new species, Tuberfemurus viridulus sp. nov. is described and illustrated with photographs. The new species is similar to T. torulisinotus Deng, 2019, but differs from the latter by broader vertex, invisible frontal costa in profile, distinctly truncate apex of hind pronotal process, and two large triangular projections on lower outer carinae of hind femur. An updated key to species of Tuberfemurus is provided. Simultaneously, the complete mitochondrial genome of Tuberfemurus viridulus sp. nov. is sequenced and analyzed. The total length of the assembled mitogenome is 15,060 bp with 37 typical mitochondrial genes and a non-coding region (A + T-rich region). The order and orientation of the gene arrangement pattern are identical to that of most Tetrigoidea species. All PCGs initiate with the standard start codon of ATN, except ATP6 with GAC and ND1 with TTG; and terminate with the complete stop codon (TAA/TAG) or with an incomplete T- codon. This data could provide the genome information available for Tetrigoidea and facilitate phylogenetic studies of related insects.  


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTOPHER H. DIETRICH ◽  
DMITRY A. DMITRIEV ◽  
EVGENY E. PERKOVSKY

Rovnoxestus rasnitsyni gen. & sp. nov. is described from Eocene Rovno amber based on an adult female and fifth-instar nymph collected at a recently discovered locality at Perebrody, Rovno Province, Ukraine. The new fossil taxon is tentatively placed in Aphrodinae and resembles Xestocephalites Dietrich & Gonçalves from Eocene Baltic amber but has the hind femur macrosetal formula 2+2+1 and hind tarsomere I in both nymph and adult with an elongated inner preapical seta. This is the first species of Eocene leafhopper for which both the adult and nymph are described in detail.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica H Browne ◽  
Darryl T. Gwynne

Abstract Despite their prevalence in nature, the evolution of sex-specific female ornaments is still not well understood. Although in some cases (often carotenoid-based ornaments) they appear to honestly signal quality, such as fecundity, it has been suggested that some female ornaments have evolved to deceptively to obtain matings. We address these two hypotheses in the long-tailed dance fly ( Rhamphomyia longicauda ), where females possess two sex-specific ornaments: pinnate scales on the hind femur and tibia and abdominal sacs that are inflated in female-biased display swarms. Although several studies have suggested that female ornaments in this species are deceptive, evidence is mixed and requires further investigation. Here, we use static allometry (with body size as a proxy for condition) of both ornamental and non-ornamental traits in females (and homologous non-ornamental traits in males) in order to determine whether they are honest or deceptive signals of quality. Most male traits scaled isometrically with body size, however male leg hairs showed positive static allometry, probably because they are involved in nuptial-prey capture or in grasping mates. Ornamental traits in females (abdomen area and tibia scale length) showed significant positive allometry and had steep slopes relative to non-ornamental traits. As larger females invest more in ornamentation relative to smaller females, this suggests that these traits are likely honest, condition-dependent signals of quality. We note that honesty and deception are not mutually exclusive hypotheses. Individuals may vary in their signalling strategy, resulting in, for example, deception from some low condition individuals but honesty overall. Although our finding of positive allometry makes it unlikely this occurs in long tailed dance flies, simultaneous honesty and deception should be considered in future studies of female ornamentation.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4975 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-192
Author(s):  
ZIYANG ZHANG ◽  
ZHIXING LIU ◽  
HONG YIN

Two new species of the genus are described from Zhejiang, China in this paper. The new species Criotettix jinningensis sp. nov. is similar to Criotettix strivertexoides Zheng, Wei & Li, 2009, but differs in width of vertex narrower than diameter of eye; pronotum shorter, not reaching the end of hind tibiae; width of fore wing 1.3 times width of mid leg femur and hind wing not reaching the end of pronotum. The new species Criotettix pananensis sp. nov. is similar to Criotettix transpi-noides Zheng, Bai & Xu, 2012, it differs from latter by width of vertex narrower than diameter of eye; pronotum with parallel lateral keels and without a pair short longitudinal keels between shoulders; hind femur without projection in upper keel and hind wing extending over the end of pronotum. The type specimens are deposited in the College of Life Sciences, Hebei University, Baoding, China. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4877 (1) ◽  
pp. 195-200
Author(s):  
ZHU-QING HE ◽  
PU GONG ◽  
TIAN-HAO HU ◽  
ZI-XU YIN ◽  
ZI-HAO SHEN ◽  
...  

In this study, we describe one new species, Sichuana feicui He sp. nov., from Mao County, Sichuan Province, China. This new species is different from S. cryptospina in the shape of cercus, and the color pattern of hind femur. The type specimens are deposited in Museum of Biology, East China Normal University (ECNU). 


2020 ◽  
Vol 418 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
I. Ya. Grichanov ◽  

A new species Sybistroma genriki sp. n. from the Yunnan province of China is described. It belongs to S. incisa group of species, differing from other species in mostly yellow antenna with arista-like stylus much longer than postpedicel; postpedicel elongated, much longer than wide, acute apically; stylus apical, with dark and white apical swelling; lower postocular setae white; legs mostly yellow except mostly black mid and hind coxae and brown-black distal spot on hind femur. A key to 11 species from Sichuan and Yunnan is provided, based mainly on male secondary sexual characters. The known distribution of the dolichopodine genus Sybistroma Meigen, 1824, is briefly discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 418 ◽  
pp. 15-18
Author(s):  
S.Yu. Storozhenko ◽  

Stolzia vietnamensis sp. n. is described from South Vietnam (Dong Nai Province). New species similar to S. flavomaculata (Willemse, 1939) from Dinding Island (Malaysia), S. hainanensis (Tinkham, 1940) and S. jianfengensis Zheng et Ma, 1989 from Hainan Island (China) but differs by color of hind tibiae and by light brown hind femur and disc of pronotum. This is first record of the genus Stolzia Willemse, 1930 from mainland Asia.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4830 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-61
Author(s):  
DANILO CÉSAR AMENT ◽  
GIAR-ANN KUNG ◽  
BRIAN V. BROWN

Forty-one new species of the mostly neotropical genus Coniceromyia Borgmeier are described. The descriptions follow the methodology of recent works on the genus taxonomy and illustrate habitus, foremetatarsus, wing, hind femur, and hypopygium for each species. Unique features of some species are also illustrated, including several male features possibly related to sexual selection such as processes on different tarsomeres of the foreleg. New records for the known species are presented, as well as an identification key for the species of the genus and maps with their updated distribution. Coniceromyia brandaoi Ament & Amorim is synonymized with Coniceromyia plaumanni Borgmeier. Even though this work examined the Coniceromyia of the major collections of neotropical Phoridae, the high number of singletons and doubletons indicates that the real diversity of the genus may still be far from understood. 


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakke Sameli Neiro

AbstractThe evolution of morphological allometry or scaling is a long-standing enigma in biology. Three types of allometric relationships have been defined: static, ontogenetic and evolutionary allometry. However, the theory of the interrelationship between these three types of allometry have not been tested in Orthopterans and to a lesser extent in hemimetabolous insects. Here, the ontogenetic allometry of hind femur length in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus was observed to be slightly positive as compared with a negative allometric relationship for Orthopterans in general, while the instar-specific static allometries were highly variable. The findings give support for the size-grain hypothesis in Orthoptera and indicate that ontogenetic allometries may not predict evolutionary allometries. The current model for the developmental basis of allometry derived from holometabolous insects is extended into a phylogenetic context and the potential of G. bimaculatus and other Orthopterans for further experiments of evo-devo of morphological scaling is discussed.


ZooKeys ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 915 ◽  
pp. 87-105
Author(s):  
Yongying Ruan ◽  
Alexander S. Konstantinov ◽  
Guanya Shi ◽  
Yi Tao ◽  
You Li ◽  
...  

Flea beetles (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae, Galerucinae, Alticini) are a hyperdiverse group of organisms with approximately 9900 species worldwide. In addition to walking as most insects do, nearly all the species of flea beetles have an ability to jump and this ability is commonly understood as one of the key adaptations responsible for its diversity. Our investigation of flea beetle jumping is based on high-speed filming, micro-CT scans and 3D reconstructions, and provides a mechanical description of the jump. We reveal that the flea beetle jumping mechanism is a catapult in nature and is enabled by a small structure in the hind femur called an ‘elastic plate’ which powers the explosive jump and protects other structures from potential injury. The explosive catapult jump of flea beetles involves a unique ‘high-efficiency mechanism’ and ‘positive feedback mechanism’. As this catapult mechanism could inspire the design of bionic jumping limbs, we provide a preliminary design for a robotic jumping leg, which could be a resource for the bionics industry.


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