Oecanthus dulcisonans

Oecanthus dulcisonans is a species of cricket sparsely but widely distributed in the Mediterranean Basin and in the Middle East.

Oecanthus dulcisonans
O. dulcisonans, male
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Family: Gryllidae
Genus: Oecanthus
Species:
O. dulcisonans
Binomial name
Oecanthus dulcisonans
Gorochov, 1993

Distribution and habitat

The species can be found in several Thyrrhenian coastal regions of Italy, as well as in Sardinia and Sicily. O. dulcisonans was originally reported from Saudi Arabia and is present also in the Canary Islands.[1]

In the Mediterranean area, its range overlaps that of its congener O. pellucens. According to some studies, O. dulcisonans sings preferentially from trees while O. pellucens seems to prefer high grass such as the vegetation growing along the small streams.

This thermophilic and heliophilic species is not particularly demanding, and can be found both in wet and in xeric environments.

Description

The adult males grow up to 13–15 millimetres (0.51–0.59 in) long, while females reach 14–16 millimetres (0.55–0.63 in). The overall color is yellowish. Long forewings cover entirely the abdomen, hind wings are decidedly longer. It can be distinguished from O. pellucens by its bigger size, by the different shape of the sternal plate, and by the male genitalia. The morphological differences were investigated by Cordero et al. [2]

Its namesake song is among the most useful characters to recognize O. dulcisonans form O. pellucens: the strong and melodious trill of the former is continuous, as opposed to the equal, discrete 0.5sec - 1sec trills of O. pellucens. Furthermore, peak frequency by O. dulcisonans is slightly higher. Both species are difficult to locate by the unaided ear: the insect can vary the elevation of the forewings making difficult to identify the provenance of the sound, reverberated by the high grass or by the reeds.

Biology

O. dulcisonans is omnivorous but mainly zoophagous, and is more active at night. Adults appear in July / August and their song can be heard until early autumn. Eggs are deposed into the stem of various herbaceous plants.

Its shape and color make captures difficult, but it can be attracted to artificial light.

This species is most probably underrecorded due to its elusiveness and its similarity with O. pellucens.

References

  1. Massa, Bruno; Fontana, Paolo; Buzzetti, Filippo M.; Kleukers, Roy (2012). Fauna d'Italia Vol. XLVIII - Orthoptera. Milan, Italy: Calderini. pp. 377–378. ISBN 978-88-506-5408-6.
  2. Cordero, Pedro J.; Llorente, Vicenta; Cordero, PAU; Ortego, Joaquín (2009). "Recognizing taxonomic units in the field—The case of the crickets Oecanthus dulcisonans Gorochov 1993, and O. Pellucens (Scopoli, 1763) (Orthoptera: Gryllidae): Implications for their distribution and conservation in Southern Europe". Zootaxa. 2284: 63–68. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2284.1.5.

Bibliography

  • Brizio, C. & Buzzetti F.M. 2014. Biodiversity Journal, 2014, 5 (1): 25–38 >> Ultrasound recordings of some Orthoptera from Sardinia (Italy)
  • Gorochov [Ed.]. 1993. Fauna of Saudi Arabia 13:90 – urn:lsid:Orthoptera.speciesfile.org:TaxonName:26112
  • Ingrisch. 1999. Esperiana 7:352 >> Orthopteroid insects of Yemen –
  • Schmidt G.H. & Herrmann M., 2000. Boll. Soc. Sarda Sci. Nat.,32: 83-128. >> Occurrence and distribution of Orthopteroidea, Blattoptera, Mantodea, Phasmodea and Dermaptera in Sardinia/Italy.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.