Re: Insect or Invertebrates Identification
Posted: Fri Mar 05, 2021 7:39 pm
Yea right so much so for luck Seems as if I'm stuck with an old male nomad then
for the info Klipspringer
for the info Klipspringer
Go wild for Wildlife and help to keep our Conservation Areas pure, natural and green.
https://africawild-forum.com/
That's what you get for this onemposthumus wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 7:39 pm Yea right so much so for luck Seems as if I'm stuck with an old male nomad then
for the info Klipspringer
Thx LisbethLisbeth wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 8:00 pm And now it is in our Africa Wild Invertebrates Book https://www.africawild-forum.com/viewto ... 89#p534689
ExFmem wrote: ↑Sat Jan 09, 2021 11:41 pm African Mantis Miomantis sp. (Saussure 1870)
Superfamily Miomantoidea. Family Miomantidae. Subfamily Miomantinae. Tribe Miomantini
Genus Miomantis
Miomantis is a large genus comprising about 65 named species distributed in Egypt and eastern and southern Africa (Beier 1935c, Schoeman 1985, Roy 1987b). It is in urgent need of revision, as many of the species named by Giglio-Tos are based on color only. Beier(1955) points out that the only certain way of distinguishing the species is by way of the structure and form of the male genitalia.
2016 KTP by ExF
Diagnosis.
*Moderately small mantids, variably green/brown in color.
*Head broader than long, distinctly wider than pronotum, especially in female; ocelli and antennae inserted on anterior face, the ocelli without prominent tubercles or elevations and the antennae filiform; frons much wider than high, with corners more or less rounded; eyes rounded or conical but not projecting.
*Pronotum moderately slender, anteriorly rounded and narrower than posterior, with a flat, oval, weak supracoxal swelling, the disc, which in female is occasionally granular with serrated edges.
*Wings present in both sexes; in male well developed, hyaline, occasionally somewhat smoky, the tegmina having a longitudinal coloured stripe between costal and discoidal fields; in female somewhat shortened, variable in length, opaque, the tegmina with costal field at most half as wide as discoidal field.
*Raptorial legs strong; coxa longer than metazone of pronotum, with strongly developed denticles; femur moderately slender, with 4 discoidal and
4 outer teeth; ventral surface around outer teeth with several denticles; claw-furrow situated in proximal half of femur; tibia with 7 teeth in outer row.
*Middle and hind legs normal; middle metatarsus as long as other segments together, hind metatarsus longer.
*Suranal plate triangular, not elongate. Cerci moderately short, simple.
*Sexual dimorphism strong.
Links:
https://www.biotaxa.org/fnz/article/viewFile/1765/2911
http://biodiversityadvisor.sanbi.org/wp ... todea.xlsx
You can just ID there!Klipspringer wrote: ↑Tue Mar 16, 2021 7:37 pm
(we can discuss here and later move to the ID topic where currently Richprins and Lisbeth are fooling around)
(we can discuss here and later move to the ID topic where currently Richprins and Lisbeth are fooling around)