Anabropsini

Anabropsini is a tribe of king crickets.[1] The tribe comprises over 40 species, has a broad distribution in Old and New World tropics, including Asia, Africa, Oceania, Central America, and South America.[1]

Anabropsini
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Family: Anostostomatidae
Subfamily: Anabropsinae
Tribe: Anabropsini
Rentz & Weissman, 1973
Type genus
Anabropsis
Rehn, 1901
Genera

5, see text.

Description

Tribes in the subfamily Anabropsinae are distinguished from each other by the shape of the tenth abdominale tergite in males. While the tergite may be narrowed or hooked in other tribes, it is "normal and rather large" in Anabropsini.[2] Members of the tribe bear a "single, distinct longitudinal keel on the external pagina of the hind femur".[3]

Taxonomy

The tribe Anabropsini was erected in 1973 by David C. F. Rentz and David B. Weissman in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.[1][3] The type genus Anabropsis was first formally described in 1901 by American entomologist James Abram Garfield Rehn.[4][5]

Genera include:[1]

References

  1. Cigliano, M. M.; Braun, H.; Eades, D. C.; Otte, D. "tribe Anabropsini Rentz & Weissman, 1973". orthoptera.speciesfile.org. Orthoptera Species File. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  2. Gorochov & Cadena-Castañeda. 2016. New and little known Stenopelmatoidea (Orthoptera: Ensifera) from America. Zoosystematica Rossica 25(1):99
  3. Rentz, D. C.; Weissman, D. B. (1973). "The Origins and Affinities of the Orthoptera of the Channel Islands and Adjacent Mainland California. Part I. The Genus Cnemotettix". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 125: 89–120. JSTOR 4064685.
  4. Cigliano, M. M.; Braun, H.; Eades, D. C.; Otte, D. "genus Anabropsis Rehn, 1901". orthoptera.speciesfile.org. Orthoptera Species File. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  5. Gurney, Ashley B. (1 August 1965). "James Abram Garfield Rehn 1881–1965". Journal of Economic Entomology. 58 (4): 805–807. doi:10.1093/jee/58.4.805a.
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