Polionemobius taprobanensis


Polionemobius taprobanensis is a species of ground cricket found in Asia. Two forms are recognised: subtropical and temperate.

Taxonomy

The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1869 as Trigonidium taprobanense from the holotype collected in Sri Lanka. However, a 2023 study comparing mitochondrial genomes suggested that the temperate form collected in Japan and populations from China may have diverged sufficiently to be considered separate species, based on the number of amino acid differences in protein-coding genes.

Description

Female : The body is piceous and pubescent. The head has three stripes and the face is a dingy testaceous color. The eyes are large and prominent. The prothorax has a testaceous spot on each side. The oviduct is nearly as long as the abdomen. The hind tibiae have three long, slender spines and are banded with testaceous. The fore wings are cinereous, reach the tip of the abdomen, and are marked with seven brown dots. The hind wings are pellucid and twice as long as the fore wings. The body length is 2 lines.

Distribution

This species has a very broad distribution, recorded from Sri Lanka and Java to the Russian Far East. In Japan, both the temperate form, whose range is most likely confined to the main islands, and the subtropical form, present in the Ryukyu Islands, are recognized. Their distributions are divided approximately at this archipelago.

Biology

P. taprobanensis temperate form undergoes photoperiod-dependent egg diapause, a trait typically absent in the subtropical form. Despite this, hybrids between the two forms are fertile.