identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
B188F7B0633655AD91F91F3BA1430361.text	B188F7B0633655AD91F91F3BA1430361.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gymnogryllus odonopetalus Xie & Zheng 2003	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Gymnogryllus odonopetalus Xie &amp; Zheng, 2003</p>
            <p>Figs 1E-F, 3, 4, 5</p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus odonopetalus Xie &amp; Zheng, 2003: 496, 498. </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus yunnanensis Ma &amp; Zhang, 2011: 31-40, syn. nov. </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus longus Ma &amp; Zhang, 2011: 31-40, syn. nov. </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus tumidulus Ma &amp; Zhang, 2011: 31-40, syn. nov. </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus striatus Ma &amp; Zhang, 2011: 31-40, syn. nov. </p>
            <p>Holotype.</p>
            <p> Type locality: Menglun, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. Deposited at Museum of Flora and Fauna of Shaanxi Normal University,  Xi’an , China (SNNU). </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p>  China: 1 male (holotype), Yunnan, Xishuangbanna,  Menglun , Sept. 8, 1999, Xie, Lingde coll. (SNNU)  ;   2 males and 1 female, Yunnan, Honghe,  Wengdang , Jun. 11, 2009, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   1 female, Yunnan, Mengla, Shangyong,  Longmen , May 13, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   1 male, Yunnan, Mengla (or  Wangtianshu ), Oct. 2, 2014, Zhang, Tao coll. (SNNU)  ;   3 males, Yunnan,  Jinghong , Jul. 11, 2018, Peng, Zhong coll. (SNNU)  ;   2 males, Yunnan,  Pu’er ,  Jinggu , Aug. 17, 2021, He, Zhixin coll. (SNNU)  ;   7 males, Yunnan,  Pu’er ,  Simaoqu , Aug. 18, 2021, He, Zhixin coll. (SNNU)  ;   15 males, Yunnan, Mengla,  Menglun , Aug. 25, 2021, He, Zhixin coll. (SNNU)  ;   3 females, Yunnan, Mengla,  Menglun , Aug. 25, 2021, He, Zhixin coll. (SNNU)  . </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>(Fig. 2). China (Yunnan, Guangxi, Guangdong).</p>
            <p>Measurements (mm).</p>
            <p>Male (N = 30): BL 27.73-29.42; HW 6.42-6.84; PL 4.86-5.32; FWL 18.62-21.32; HLL 16.27-17.12; HTL 9.43-10.14; EW 1.56-1.79; PW 7.62-7.98; HWL 6.04-6.84; DVL 4.62-4.96; ML 3.72-3.98; CL 8.15-8.54; FTL 5.42-5.76; MTL 6.29-6.45.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (Figs 1E, 3A). Head longer than wide, as wide as fore margin of pronotum. Vertex smooth and broad. Occiput slightly inclined. Frontal rostrum as wide as one eye and flattened. Scape of antennae flat, shield-like, and as wide as half of frontal rostrum. With three small ocelli, arranged in a straight line, median ocellus semilunar. Eyes about 1/4 length of head. Epistomal suture straight and close to eyes. Labrum slightly convex and rhombus shaped. Last segment of maxillary palpi slightly narrower than the third. Labial palpi the middle segment longer than the others.</p>
            <p>Pronotum disc rectanglur, anterior margin concave, posterior margin sinuated; a longitudinal groove in middle of pronotum, about 2/3 the length of the pronotum. Fore margin of pronotum rough and densely pubescent. Tegmen reaching tip of abdomen; with three oblique veins, outmost nearly vertical and straight, two internal inclined and longer than outmost; and them converging diagonal vein. Diagonal vein curved and anteriorly forked. Chord veins three, the internal two extremely curved, connected at bottom. Between diagonal vein and the most internal chord vein armed with two transverse veins. Mirror large, inclined rectangular. Apical field triangular, about 2/5 the length of tegmina, variable among individuals, armed with rectangular cells.</p>
            <p>Fore tibiae with inner and outer tympanum, inner tympanum small and ovoid, outer longer-oval. Hind femora brown with light stripes. Distal of hind tibiae with five dorsal spurs on both sides; apical spurs six, the inner apical spurs three (the dorsal one longest, the ventral one shortest and 1/4 length of the longest one, the middle one about 2/3 length of the longest), and the outer apical spurs three (equal length of the dorsal one and the ventral one, about 2/3 length of the middle one). Subgenital plate hook-like. Cercus straight and short; with long hair sparse and short hair dense.</p>
            <p>Genitalia (Figs 4, 5). Male genitalia robust, epiphallus arch-shaped in front view; inner side of medial lobe armed with a pair of teeth. Median notch between paired apical teeth and length of teeth varyable between individuals. End of middle lobes of epiphallus bent upward, for less than 90°, varyable between individuals. Notch of epiphallus anterior variable, with bottom angular or broad and arc-shaped. Outer edge of end of ectoparamere armed with irregular numbers of teeth.</p>
            <p>Coloration (Fig. 3). Head, pronotum and much of the hind femur blackish brown. Occiput uniformly blackish brown. 1/3 part of cheek bottom brown. Frons black, ventral quarter of lateral lobe with a light stripe. Hind femur black.</p>
            <p>Female (Figs 1F, 3B). Slightly smaller than male, with tegmina dark brown. Ovipositor as long as pronotum.</p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> Ma and Zhang (2011) proposed four species,  G. yunnanensis ,  G. striatus ,  G. longus , and  G. tumidulus , based on the angle between the apical epiphallic teeth, the posterior edge of the medial lobe of epiphallus, and the apical field of the forewing. We examined our specimens and determined that these characters present intraspecific variation. In particular, the angle between the apical teeth of epiphallus shows tremendous variation between specimens (Fig. 4A-F). Besides, the epiphalli of these four species are armed with two pairs of teeth inside, which is consistent with the holotype of  G. odonopetalus deposited in SNNU (in fact, we found that one pair of teeth is formed by the ectoparamere curved at the tip on the type specimen of  G. odonopetalus ). Therefore, we regard  G. yunnanensis ,  G. striatus ,  G. longus , and  G. tumidulus as junior synonyms of  G. odonopetalus . </p>
            <p> Hence, the species  G. odonopetalus has some charecters showing intraspecific variation even within specimens collected from the same place and time. In lateral view, the angle between the apical teeth and the posterior edge of the medial lobe of epiphallus is variable among individuals (red arrows in Fig. 4); the protuberances in the middle of the ectoparamere vary in size (blue circles indicate the protuberance of mid-ectoparamere in Fig. 4). In dorsal view, the end of the epiphallus is variable (shown by green circles in Fig. 4G-L); the anterior notch of epiphallus is morphologically also diverse. In caudal view, shape and space between apical teeth of epiphallus are variable (drawing of epiphallus in Fig. 5D-F, J-L); the length of the apical area of the ectoparamere varies among individuals. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B188F7B0633655AD91F91F3BA1430361	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wang, Ning;Huang, Huateng;Ma, Li-Bin	Wang, Ning, Huang, Huateng, Ma, Li-Bin (2022): The intraspecific variation of morphology and coloration of field crickets: a taxonomic revision of Chinese Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877 and Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Gryllini). ZooKeys 1129: 85-107, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706
1300E0C5928553CC8D7DA8DB4711C8BE.text	1300E0C5928553CC8D7DA8DB4711C8BE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gymnogryllus Saussure 1877	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Genus  Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877</p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus Brunner von Wattenwyl 1893: 197; Gorochov 1983: 321; Yin and Liu 1995: 194; Ma and Zhang 2011: 31; Gorochov 2022: 4. </p>
            <p> Brachytrypus (Gymnogryllus) Saussure, 1877: 291. </p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Gryllus elegans (=  Gymnogryllus leucostictus ).  Brachytrypus (Gymnogryllus) Saussure, 1877: 291. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>India, Australia, western Himalayas, Burma, Vietnam, Malaysia, China.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Body large. Head, pronotum and much of hind femur blackish brown; rest of body of light color. Light brown bands uniformly distributed over posterior peduncle. Forewings not reaching tip of abdomen; hind wings largely surpassing abdomen. Mirror inclined rectangular. The length of the apical field of forewings varies among individuals. Subgenital plate shaped as hook. Genitalia large, in caudal view, epiphallus arch-shaped and the apically armed with a pair of long teeth. The space between the teeth and the shape of them varied among individuals (Fig. 5). Ovipositor very short, almost straight.</p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> Eight species of  Gymnogryllus are reported from China, and six of them have been found in Yunnan. Among them,  G. longus ,  G. tumidulus ,  G. yunnanensis , and  G. striatus have been described for differences in the angle of the epiphallic apex and the length of the apical field of tegmen. However, they are similar to  G. odonopetalus in appearance and can be collected from the same location at the same time. We compared specimens collected from the same site and concluded that these two features present intraspecific variation and are unreliable for species delimitation. We consider that all four taxa are synonyms of  G. odonopetalus . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1300E0C5928553CC8D7DA8DB4711C8BE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wang, Ning;Huang, Huateng;Ma, Li-Bin	Wang, Ning, Huang, Huateng, Ma, Li-Bin (2022): The intraspecific variation of morphology and coloration of field crickets: a taxonomic revision of Chinese Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877 and Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Gryllini). ZooKeys 1129: 85-107, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706
11AD3131B55B515E8C0F25DDBCC7F17D.text	11AD3131B55B515E8C0F25DDBCC7F17D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phonarellus Gorochov 1983	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Genus  Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983</p>
            <p> Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983: 323; Yin and Liu 1995: 194; Ma and Zhang 2011: 31. </p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus minor . </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, China, Gabon, India, Japan, Kenya, Mali, Sierre Leone, Vietnam.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Ocelli positioned in an almost straight line. Antenna ornamented with white ring-like pattern. Scapus conspicuously narrower than the half-width of the rostrum. Apical field shorter than mirror or slightly longer. Both tympana present. Hind tibiae shorter than half the length of hind femur. Epiphallus with large lateral lobes but without median lobe. Cerci usually dark with light proximally. We regard all species as belonging to  Phonarellus , whose characters are as follows: ovipositor well developed and rather long; ectoparamere short. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> Four species of this genus have been reported from China (  P. ritsemae ,  P. minor ,  P. flavipes , and  P. zebripes ).  Phonarellus flavipes has been described for its yellow hind legs and the interval between the anterior of the first and second oblique veins. But these characters can also be found in  P. minor living side by side with  P. flavipes . Studying a large number of specimens of these three taxa from Yunnan and Guangdong, we tested whether the color of hind legs is a valid trait for species delimitation, and provided a description of  P. ritsemae . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/11AD3131B55B515E8C0F25DDBCC7F17D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wang, Ning;Huang, Huateng;Ma, Li-Bin	Wang, Ning, Huang, Huateng, Ma, Li-Bin (2022): The intraspecific variation of morphology and coloration of field crickets: a taxonomic revision of Chinese Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877 and Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Gryllini). ZooKeys 1129: 85-107, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706
DDCBC5BC25BA552781C5DC60A4AB005B.text	DDCBC5BC25BA552781C5DC60A4AB005B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phonarellus minor (Chopard 1959)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Phonarellus minor (Chopard, 1959)</p>
            <p>Figs 1A-C, 6, 7, 8</p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus minor Chopard, 1959: 1; Bhowmik 1985: 14. </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus kashmirensis Bhowmik, 1977: 24, misidentification. </p>
            <p> Phonarellus (Phonarellus) minor : Gorochov 1983: 91, 323-328; Kim and Pham 2014: 61; Gu et al. 2018: 11. </p>
            <p> Phonarellus minor : Yin and Liu 1995: 138-139; Saeed et al. 2000: 176; Xie 2004: 116 </p>
            <p> Gymnogryllus (Phonarellus) minor : Ingrisch and Garai 2001: 759. </p>
            <p> Phonarellus flavipes Xia et al., 1991: 123; Yin and Liu 1995: 49, syn. nov. </p>
            <p>Holotype information.</p>
            <p> Type locality: Asia-Tropical, Indian Subcontinent, India, Kerala, Malabar Coast,  Mahé . Deposited at  Muséum National  d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France (not examined). </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p>  China: 36 males and 28 females, Yunnan, Mengla, Shangyong,  Longmen , 1030 m, May 13, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;  5 females, same location as before, 1030 m, May 18, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU) ;  4 males and 4 females, same location as before, 943 m, May 13, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU) ;  3 males, same location as before, 996 m, May 13, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU) ;   1 male, Yunnan, Jinping, Mengla,  Xinmeng , 450 m, May 3, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   3 males, Yunnan, Mengla, Mengban,  Hebianzhai , 855 m, May 23, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   4 males, Yunnan, Mengla,  Menglun , 690 m, May 28, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   6 males, Yunnan, Cangyuan,  Banlao , 1134 m, Jun. 5, 2013, Ma, Libin coll. (SNNU)  ;   2 males, Yunnan,  Hekou , 100 m, Jun. 7, 1982, Jin, Gentao coll. (SEM)  ;   2 males and 1 female, Yunnan, Xishuangbanna,  Menglun , 1000 m, Jun. 3, 2009, Liu, Xianwei coll. (SEM)  ;   3 males and 2 females, Yunnan, Mengla,  Yaoqu , Jun. 1, 2009, Ma, Libin coll. (NWAFU)  .   Vietnam: 1 female,  Tonkin , Jul. 1940, A. De Cooman coll. (SEM)  . </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>(Fig. 2). China (Yunnan, Guangdong), India, Vietnam.</p>
            <p>Measurements.</p>
            <p>BL 12.86-14.23; HW 3.54-3.75; PL 2.26-2.39; PW 4.12-4.56; FWL 9.13-9.68; HWL 7.45-8.23; MTL 3.24-3.46; CL 4.67-5.31; HTL 4.73-5.21; HLL 8.11-8.42; OL 7.28-7.64.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Body bicolored; head and legs often yellow or yellowish-brown, remainders always dark brown. Body size small for the genus. Both proximal and anterior notch of epiphallus arc-like and posterior notch almost right angular. Coloration of hind legs variable.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>(Figs 1A-C, 8A-D, I). Body sized small for the genus, fusiform. Frons rounded. Median ocellus small, oval; lateral ocelli larger and rounded. Epistomal suture slightly upward convex and sometimes almost straight. Rostrum slightly widened. Scapus about half as wide as rostrum. Labrum rounded and slightly laterally widened, with apical margin arc-like, sometimes straight or with notch. Last segment of maxillary palpi rod-like, nearly as wide as third segment.</p>
            <p>Disc of pronotum laterally widened and with hind margin slightly wider than fore margin; anterior margin broadly concave, posterior margin almost straight. Oblique veins three, the outmost one short and two internal of them longer and inclined; the top of them close each other. Diagonal vein straight. Chord veins three, the internal two veins extremely bent, connected at the bottom. Between the diagonal vein and the most internal chord vein armed with a transverse vein. The most internal chord vein linking with mirror by two transverse veins. Mirror small; the basal margin of mirror angle-like, dividing vein angular and the width of mirror nearly equal to the length. Field area short, close to the length of mirror, or slightly longer than mirror. Hind wings long and the uncovered portions longer than the half-length of forewings.</p>
            <p>Fore tibiae with inner tympanum small and ovoid; the outer one large and oblong. Hind tibiae short, half the length of hind femur. Inner dorsal spurs of hind tibiae curved distally and longer than the outer ones. The length and number of dorsal spurs varied, while the basal spurs rather short, they numbered five or six of both the inner and outer; while spurs vary in length, the number of inner and outer spurs always 4:4. Inner apical spurs longer than outer ones. The median one of outer apical spurs longest and the remaining ones almost equal in length, and the bottom one of inner apical spurs shortest and the remaining ones in similar length. Inner dorsal spines of the first hind tarsus numbered 5-7 and outer ones numbered 7-9. Cercus thickness proximally and tapering. Subgenital plate simple and cucullate with acute apex.</p>
            <p>Genitalia (Fig. 8E-G). Lateral lobes of epiphallus large. In lateral view apex obtuse and slightly upward curved. Epiphallus without median lobe, hind margin broad arc-like in middle, proximal margin arcuate, similar to outer margin. In caudal view, ectoparamere with three ridges, two horizontal and one vertical; area around ridges dark, and central area whitish.</p>
            <p>Female (Fig. 8B, D, J). Ovipositor short, arrow-like. Tegmina dark brown.</p>
            <p> Coloration (Fig. 8A-D, H). Head orange. Fore and median legs and hind tibiae yellowish-brown. Coloration of hind femur variable, either uniformly dark brown, or dark brown in middle and basal, and apical areas yellowish-brown or wholy yellowish-brown.  Female’s forewings dark brown.  Male’s forewings dark brown, but harp area and mirror light colored (these parts membranous and lucent). Cercus yellowish-brown with apical area dark brown. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The original description of  P. flavipes does not mention genital characters. Xia et al. (1991) only pointed out that coloration of the hind femur and differences in the distance between the first and second oblique veins at the base could distinguish this species from  P. minor . We showed that the distance at the base of oblique veins varies among individuals in  P. minor (Figs 6, 8I). Moreover, the proportion of the black area on the hind femur also has a considerable amount of variation within  P. minor (Fig. 7). The typical color scheme is 70% black (35% of the individuals), but more than 5% of the individuals have less than 10% or more than 95% of black area. The coloration of the hind femur is a continuous trait, and both extremes exist in  P. minor . Hence, we consider that  P. flavipes is a junior synonym of  P. minor . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DDCBC5BC25BA552781C5DC60A4AB005B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wang, Ning;Huang, Huateng;Ma, Li-Bin	Wang, Ning, Huang, Huateng, Ma, Li-Bin (2022): The intraspecific variation of morphology and coloration of field crickets: a taxonomic revision of Chinese Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877 and Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Gryllini). ZooKeys 1129: 85-107, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706
2ED2606AC0855184BF8AC6907CB44447.text	2ED2606AC0855184BF8AC6907CB44447.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phonarellus ritsemae (Saussure 1877)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Phonarellus ritsemae (Saussure, 1877)</p>
            <p>Figs 1D, 9, 10, 11</p>
            <p> Liogryllus ritsemae Saussure, 1877: 304; Chopard 1936: 4. </p>
            <p> Acheta ritsemae : Shiraki 1930: 200. </p>
            <p> Gryllus ritsemae : Hisumatsu 1952: 43. </p>
            <p> Tartarogryllus ritsemae : Chopard 1961: 272; Randell 1964: 1582; Leroy 1966: 39; Chopard 1967: 73. </p>
            <p> Phonarellus ritsemae : Yin and Liu, 1995: 138-139; Ichikawa et al. 2000: 260; Hollier et al. 2013: 515. </p>
            <p>Holotype.</p>
            <p>Type locality: Japan. Deposited at National Nature Historical Museum, Leiden, Netherlands (not examined).</p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p>  China: 1 female, Yunnan, Mengla, Shangyong,  Longmen , May 13, 2013, Ma, Libin (SNNU)  ;  1 male, same location as before, May 14, 2013, Ma, Libin (SNNU) ;  1 male and 2 females, same location as before, May 18, 2013, Ma, Libin (SNNU) ;   1 male, Yunnan, Lvchun,  Banpo , May 9, 2013, Ma, Libin. (SNNU)  ;   1 female, Yunnan, Mengla,  Yaoqu , May 25, 2013, Ma, Libin (SNNU)  ;   1 female, Yunnan, Mengla,  Menglun , May 28, 2013, Ma, Libin (SNNU)  ;   9 males and 1 female, Guangdong, Shaoguan,  Luoshanzhen , May 13, 2015, Zhang, Tao (SNNU)  ;   8 males, Guangdong,  Shenzhen , May 17, 2015, Zhang, Tao (SNNU)  ;   1 male, Guangxi, Jingxi,  Longbang , May 2, 2019, Ma, Libin and Zhang, Tao (SNNU)  ;   1 male, Hong Kong,  Damaoshan , May 9, 2018, Ma, Libin (SNNU)  ;   1 male, Hong Kong,  Fei’eshan , May 18, 2018, Ma, Libin and Peng, Zhong (SNNU)  . </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>China (Yunnan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hong Kong), Japan..</p>
            <p>Measurements (mm).</p>
            <p>Male (N = 22): BL 13.07-15.16; HW 3.76-4.15; PL 2.74-2.81; PW 4.05-4.25; FWL 7.88-10.05; HFL 8.97-9.62; HTL 4.74-5.75; Female (N = 6): BL 15.65-16.48; HW 3.83-4.06; PL 2.51-2.75; PW 3.85-4.06; FWL 8.86-9.92; HFL 8.83-10.71; HTL 4.95-5.63.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (Figs 1D, 9A). Body medium sized, fusiform. Head smooth, about as wide as pronotum. Occiput narrowed and convex. Vertex smooth and broad. Frontal rostrum rather wide, inverted trapezoid. Median ocellus small and shaped ovoid or semilunar. Lateral ocelli larger and located on both sides of the frontal rostrum. Eyes convex, about 1/4 length of head. Antennal socket triangular. Epistomal suture straight and twice as long as frontal rostrum. Postclypeus narrow. Labrum slightly convex and elliptical. The third of maxillary palpi longest, apical segments enlarge. Each section of labial palpi progressively longer. Disc of pronotum rectangular and middle groove unconspicuous. Forewings almost as long as abdomen. Hind femora about twice as long as tibiae; armed with five dorsal spurs on inner and outer dorsal margins and with three apical spurs on both sides (the ventral one shortest, and half-length of the others, the middle one with equal length of the dorsal), the outer apical spurs three (the middle one about twice longer than the others). Subgenital plate fusiform, at end narrowed and flattened.</p>
            <p>Genitalia (Figs 10, 11). Dark brown. Epiphallus with lateral lobes large with apex acute and slightly curved upward; without median lobe but in middle sinuate with angular notch. Epiphallic anterior margin angulates with straight lateral edges or with arc-like lateral edges (Fig. 11D-F). The bottom edge of the epiphallic lateral lobes extends horizontally at the posterior and downward at the anterior. Ectoparamere with three ridges (Fig. 10D-F), a pair of horizontal ones and a vertical one; area around ridges dark, and central area whitish lucent.</p>
            <p>Female (Fig. 9B). Resembles male but larger. Ovipositor as long as forewings. Hindwings white and of equal length as forewings.</p>
            <p>Coloration (Figs 1D, 9). Body dark brown. Head, pronotum black-brown. Femora reddish brown.</p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> Yin and Liu (1995) recorded this species from Shanghai, China, but there was no detailed description of this species. We collected a large number of specimens from Yunnan and Guangdong, China and identified them as  P. ritsemae . We observed a few traits with intraspecies variation: (1) the posterior teeth of the epiphallus are variable among individuals in lateral view (as shown in Fig. 10G-I); (2) the ectoparamere can have different shapes in ventral view (as shown in Fig. 10D-F). (3) the notch at hind margin of the epiphallus can be rather wide or slightly contracted, and the ventral margin can be broad or angular in dorsal view (as shown in Fig. 11D-F); and (4) the epiphallic anterior margin can be angle-like with straight lateral edges or broad and arc-like in dorsal view (as shown in Fig. 11D-F). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2ED2606AC0855184BF8AC6907CB44447	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wang, Ning;Huang, Huateng;Ma, Li-Bin	Wang, Ning, Huang, Huateng, Ma, Li-Bin (2022): The intraspecific variation of morphology and coloration of field crickets: a taxonomic revision of Chinese Gymnogryllus Saussure, 1877 and Phonarellus Gorochov, 1983 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Gryllini). ZooKeys 1129: 85-107, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1129.87706
