Lost lovers linked at long last: elusive female Nanophyllium mystery solved after a century of being placed in a different genus (Phasmatodea, Phylliidae)
After successful laboratory rearing of both males and females from a single clutch of eggs, the genus Nanophyllium Redtenbacher, 1906 (described only from males) and the frondosum species group within Phyllium (Pulchriphyllium) Griffini, 1898 (described only from females) are found to be the opposit...
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Published in | ZooKeys Vol. 969; no. 2; pp. 43 - 84 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Pensoft Publishers
17.09.2020
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | After successful laboratory rearing of both males and females from a single clutch of eggs, the genus
Nanophyllium
Redtenbacher, 1906 (described only from males) and the
frondosum
species group within Phyllium (Pulchriphyllium) Griffini, 1898 (described only from females) are found to be the opposite sexes of the same genus. This rearing observation finally elucidates the relationship of these two small body sized leaf insect groups which, for more than a century, have never been linked before. This paper synonymizes the
frondosum
species group with
Nanophyllium
Redtenbacher, 1906 in order to create a singular and clearly defined taxonomic group. Five species are transferred from the Phyllium (Pulchriphyllium) frondosum species group and create the following new combinations:
Nanophyllium asekiense
(Größer, 2002),
comb. nov.
;
Nanophyllium chitoniscoides
(Größer, 1992),
comb. nov.
;
Nanophyllium frondosum
(Redtenbacher, 1906),
comb. nov.
;
Nanophyllium keyicum
(Karny, 1914),
comb. nov.
;
Nanophyllium suzukii
(Größer, 2008),
comb. nov.
The only taxon from this species group not transferred from the
frondosum
species group to
Nanophyllium
is Phyllium (Pulchriphyllium) groesseri Zompro, 1998. Based on protibial exterior lobes, this species belongs in the
schultzei
species group as described in Hennemann et al. 2009 and is therefore excluded from further discussion here. The rearing of
Nanophyllium
also yielded the male
Nanophyllium asekiense
(Größer, 2002),
comb. nov.
thus, enabling comparison of this male to the other previously known
Nanophyllium
species. Two new species of nano-leaf insects are described within,
Nanophyllium miyashitai
sp. nov.
, from Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea, and
Nanophyllium daphne
sp. nov.
, from Biak Island, Papua Province, Indonesia. With such distinct sexual dimorphism in
Nanophyllium
between sexes, which have only now been matched up via captive rearing, illustrated within are numerous specimens which might represent the unknown opposite sexes of the many currently known species of
Nanophyllium
. Due to pronounced sexual dimorphism in
Nanophyllium
, only future captive rearing or molecular analysis will match up the many unknown sexes. To conclude, with the description of two new
Nanophyllium
species, dichotomous keys to species for known males and females are presented. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 Academic editor: Marco Gottardo |
ISSN: | 1313-2989 1313-2970 |
DOI: | 10.3897/zookeys.969.56214 |