Onomarchus (katydid)

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Onomarchus
Onomarchus Kanara.jpg
Onomarchus uninotatus from the Western Ghats of India
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Family: Tettigoniidae
Subfamily: Pseudophyllinae
Tribe: Pseudophyllini
Genus: Onomarchus
Stål, 1874
Synonyms
  • Astralia Kirby, 1906
  • Onomarchis Hebard, 1922
  • Onomarcus Pictet & Saussure, 1892

Onomarchus [1] is a genus of bush crickets or katydids found mainly distributed in the tropical forests of Asia. Like many other members of the subfamily Pseudophyllinae, their wings appear very leaf-like.

Contents

Detail of wing of O. uninotatus Onomarchus wing.jpg
Detail of wing of O. uninotatus

A study of O. uninotatus found it to produce sounds at an unusually low frequency of about 3.5 kHz. The tympanal membrane cuts out high frequencies unlike the sound filters found in other Tettigoniids. [2]

Species

The species in the genus include

Related Research Articles

Tettigoniidae Family of insects

Insects in the family Tettigoniidae are commonly called katydids, or bush crickets. They have previously been known as "long-horned grasshoppers". More than 6,400 species are known. Part of the suborder Ensifera, the Tettigoniidae are the only extant (living) family in the superfamily Tettigonioidea.

Bioacoustics

Bioacoustics is a cross-disciplinary science that combines biology and acoustics. Usually it refers to the investigation of sound production, dispersion and reception in animals. This involves neurophysiological and anatomical basis of sound production and detection, and relation of acoustic signals to the medium they disperse through. The findings provide clues about the evolution of acoustic mechanisms, and from that, the evolution of animals that employ them.

Phaneropterinae Subfamily of cricket-like animals

The Phaneropterinae, the sickle-bearing bush crickets or leaf katydids, are a subfamily of insects within the family Tettigoniidae. Nearly 2,060 species in 85 genera throughout the world are known. They are also known as false katydids or round-headed katydids.

<i>Holochlora</i> Genus of cricket-like animals

Holochlora is a genus of bush-crickets in the subfamily Phaneropterinae. They occur in Africa and Asia.

Meconematinae Subfamily of cricket-like animals

Meconematinae is a subfamily of the bush crickets, with a worldwide distribution.

Mecopodinae Subfamily of cricket-like animals

Mecopodinae, the long-legged katydids, are a subfamily of bush crickets found in western South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and Asia. In Asia, the distribution includes India, Indochina, Japan, the Philippines, and Malesia to Papua New Guinea and Australasia, including many Pacific islands.

Mogoplistidae Family of crickets

Mogoplistidae is a family of scaly crickets within the superfamily Grylloidea. Considered to be monophyletic, a sister taxon to the Gryllidae crickets. This family consists of 30 genera and 364 species worldwide; 20 species in 4 genera occur in North America and this family includes the scaly crickets of Europe.

Conocephalinae Subfamily of cricket-like animals

Conocephalinae, meaning "conical head", is an Orthopteran subfamily in the family Tettigoniidae.

Agraeciini Tribe of cricket-like animals

Agraeciini is a large tribe of bush crickets or katydids in the conehead subfamily, Conocephalinae.

Oxyinae Subfamily of grasshoppers

Oxyinae is subfamily of grasshoppers in the family Acrididae. Species are distributed throughout Africa and Australasia.

Himertula is a genus of bush cricket in the subfamily Phaneropterinae and tribe Letanini. Species can be found mostly in the Indian sub-continent.

Letana is a genus of bush cricket: characteristic of the tribe Letanini and placed in the subfamily Phaneropterinae. Species can be found in Asia: mostly India, China and Indo-China.

<i>Elimaea</i> (katydid) Genus of cricket-like animals

Elimaea is a large genus within Tettigoniidae, the bush cricket or katydid family. Species in this genus are found in India, southern China, Indo-China and Malesia.

Mirollia is the type genus of Asian bush crickets of the tribe Mirolliini: of the subfamily Phaneropterinae. Species have been recorded from India, southern China, Indochina and Malesia.

Zulpha is a monotypic genus of bush crickets containing only the species Zulpha perlaria.

Orthelimaea is a genus of Asian bush crickets in the tribe Elimaeini within the subfamily Phaneropterinae. Species in this genus are found in India, Indo-China, and Malesia.

Rectimarginalis is a genus of Asian bush crickets of the tribe Holochlorini within the subfamily Phaneropterinae. Species are found in India, Indo-China, China, and Malesia:

<i>Stictophaula</i> Genus of cricket-like animals

Stictophaula is a genus of Asian Tettigoniidae of the tribe Holochlorini within the subfamily Phaneropterinae. They are found in Indo-China, China, and Malesia.

Coptotettix is an Asian genus of ground-hoppers in the subfamily Tetriginae.

<i>Supersonus</i> Genus of katydids

Supersonus is a genus of katydids in the order Orthoptera first described in 2014. The genus contains three species which are endemic to the rainforests of South America. Its name is an allusion to the fact that the males, in order to attract the females, produce a very high frequency noise which can reach 150 kHz. This has been considered the highest frequency ultrasonic noise of the animal kingdom. The noise is imperceptible to human hearing, which is only capable of detecting up to 20 kHz.

References

  1. Stål C (1874) Recensio Orthopterorum. Revue critique des Orthoptères décrits par Linné, De Geer et Thunberg 2 Locustina: 51, 68.
  2. Rajaraman, K.; Mhatre, N.; Jain, M.; Postles, M.; Balakrishnan, R.; Robert, D. (2012). "Low-pass filters and differential tympanal tuning in a paleotropical bushcricket with an unusually low frequency call". Journal of Experimental Biology. 216 (5): 777–787. doi: 10.1242/jeb.078352 . PMID   23125342.
  3. Ingrisch, S. & MS Shishodia (1998). "New species and records of Tettigoniidae from India (Ensifera)" (PDF). Bulletin de la Société Entomologique Suisse. 71: 355–371.
  4. DeJong, C. (1946). "A new variety of Onomarchus from British India (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae)". Zoologische Mededelingen. 26: 268-27O.