Hexacentrinae

The Hexacentrinae, are a subfamily of predatory bush crickets or katydids. The type genus is Hexacentrus, which may be known as "balloon-winged" bush crickets/katydids etc., is also the most speciose and widespread in Africa and Asia.[2][3]

Hexacentrinae
Hexacentrus unicolor
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Family: Tettigoniidae
Subfamily: Hexacentrinae
Karny, 1925
Synonyms[1]

Hexacentrini Karny, 1912

Description

The group has sometimes been treated as a tribe (as "Hexacentrini") within Conocephalinae, which may be a sister group.[2][1]

A.V. Gorochov described the following characters for this subfamily:[1]

  • rostrum of head narrow with simple, moderately long mandibles, without distinct sexual dimorphism;
  • flat, wide hind lobe of the pronotum with thoracic sternites having a pair of spines or finger-like processes;
  • fore and middle legs have tibiae with long spines, especially on the ventral surface (for predation);
  • hind wings (if not shortened) with developed “costal lobe”, and a characteristic thickened crossvein;
  • anal plate and epiproct rather simple (no distinct specializations) in both sexes, but male paraprocts have a finger-like process or distinct lobule at their apex.

Genera and Distribution

Parahexacentrus paradoxus

As of July 2022, the Orthoptera Species File lists the following tribes and genera:[2]

South American tribes

Genera have been placed in two tribes, mostly from Ecuador.[2]

Ecuanedubini Braun, Chamorro-Rengifo & Morris, 2009
  1. Acanthoraculus Braun & Morris, 2009 (1 species)
  2. Ecuaneduba Gorochov, 2006 (3 spp.)
Nubimystrigini Braun, 2016
  1. Nubimystrix Braun, 2016 (2 sp.)

Unplaced genera

  1. Aerotegmina Hemp, 2001 (4 spp. E Africa)
  2. Alison Rentz, 2001 (4 spp. Australia, New Guinea)
  3. Euhexacentrus Hebard, 1922 (1 sp. Philippines)
  4. Glenophisis Karny, 1926 (5 spp. Malesia)
  5. Hexacentrus Serville, 1831 (28 spp. Africa, SE Asia)
  6. Nepheliphila Hugel, 2010 (1 sp. Indian Ocean)
  7. Parahexacentrus Karny, 1912 (1 sp. New Guinea)
  8. Parateuthras Bolívar, 1905 (2 spp. New Guinea)
  9. Philippicentrus Willemse, 1961 (1 sp. Philippines)
  10. Teuthroides Bolívar, 1905 (1 sp. New Guinea)

References

  1. Gorochov AV (2007) Zoosystematica Rossica 16(2): 210.
  2. Orthoptera species file (retrieved 9 July 2022)
  3. Karny (1925) Sarawak Mus. J. 3: 35-53.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.