ZooKeys (Jul 2020)

Online social media tells a story of Anaselina, Paraselina, and Selivinga (Orthoptera, Tetrigidae), rare Australian pygmy grasshoppers

  • Josip Skejo,
  • Matthew Connors,
  • Michael Hendriksen,
  • Nick Lambert,
  • Griffin Chong,
  • Ian McMaster,
  • Nick Monaghan,
  • David Rentz,
  • Reiner Richter,
  • Kathy Rose,
  • Damjan Franjević

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.948.52910
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 948
pp. 107 – 119

Abstract

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Knowledge on the pygmy grasshoppers of Australia is, despite the numerous endemics being described from this unique continent, still scarce. Of interest is the Vingselina genus group, including genera Anaselina Storozhenko, 2019, Paraselina Storozhenko, 2019, Selivinga Storozhenko, 2019 and Vingselina Sjöstedt, 1921. The systematic position of this group, currently assigned to Batrachideinae (Bufonidini), is probably not correct. In this study new records are presented of Anaselina minor (Sjöstedt, 1921), Paraselina brunneri (Bolívar, 1887), P. trituberculata (Sjöstedt, 1932), and Selivinga tribulata Storozhenko, 2019, all except A. minor the first records of the species since their original descriptions. The first photographs of living specimens of A. minor, P. brunneri, P. trituberculata and S. tribulata are provided and their habitats described. All the records were compiled by citizen scientists who use online social media, such as iNaturalist. Lastly, P. multifora (Rehn, 1952) syn. nov. represents a junior synonym of P. brunneri.