Trachyaretaon

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Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Superfamily:Bacilloidea
Trachyaretaon
Trachyaretaon bresseeli from Marinfata, left female, right male
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Phasmatodea
Superfamily: Bacilloidea
Family: Heteropterygidae
Subfamily: Obriminae
Tribe: Obrimini
Genus: Trachyaretaon
Rehn, J.A.G. & Rehn, J.W.H., 1939
Type species
Trachyaretaon echinatus
(Stål, 1877)
Species[1]
Distribution of the Trachyaretaon species according to Hennemann 2023[2]
Trachyaretaon carmelae, pair
Trachyaretaon echinatus, female from 'North-Luzon'
Pair of Trachyaretaon negrosanon from Negros Island

Trachyaretaon is a genus of stick insects native to the Philippines.

The representatives of this genus correspond in the habitus typical representatives of the Obrimini and are very similar in appearance to the species of the genera Aretaon and Sungaya. Like these, they are wingless in either sex. The males of the previously known species are around 4.0 to 7.5 centimetres (1.6 to 3.0 in) in length and are smaller than the females which are 6.0 to 13.5 centimetres (2.4 to 5.3 in) in length. In egg-laying adult females, the abdomen in the middle is clearly thickened in height and width and thus almost circular in cross-section. As with the other genera of the Obriminae, a secondary ovipositor at the end of the abdomen surrounds the actual ovipositor. It is ventral formed from the eighth sternite, which is called subgenital plate or operculum and dorsally from the eleventh tergum, which here is called the supraanal plate or epiproct.[3][4][5]

In contrast to Aretaon species, those of the genus Trachyaretaon lack the clear spines in the front area of the mesonotum. Unlike the representatives of the genera Brasidas and Obrimus are found in them in the metasternum neither holes nor pits nor noticeable slits. The Trachyaretaon species differ from Sungaya in the shape of the eggs, among other things.[6][7]

Distribution

The previously known distribution area of the genus extends over the Philippine islands Palawan, Luzon and Babuyan Islands. On the latter, representatives on Calayan Island and Dalupiri are proven. In addition, representatives live on the Visayas Islands, more precisely on Negros and Panay. Whether the genus also occurs on Mindanao is uncertain or still controversial.[1][8][2]

Way of life and reproduction

Although all species are active at night and at dawn, they hardly hide. During the day they can usually be found on the food plants that they feed on at night. The cylindrical or projectile-shaped eggs are relatively small, 4 to 5 millimetres (0.16 to 0.20 in) mm long and 2 to 3 millimetres (0.079 to 0.118 in) to mm wide, even in larger species. They are usually dark gray to dark brown in color and resemble their faeces. At the front pole of the eggs there is a circular lid (operculum). The micropylar plate has three arms and its shape usually resembles an upside-down "Y", with the arm pointing toward the lid being significantly longer than the arms pointing toward the lower pole, which can also be bent. The eggs are laid in the ground using ovipositor. The nymphs hatch after three to four months. They are clearly more prickly than the imago. Depending on the species and sex, it takes five to eight months until they are adult. Males take less time. In some Trachyaretaon species parthenogenesis has been found.[5][8]

Eubulides

Trachyaretaon negrosanon**
(Obrimini sp. 'Negros')*

Sungaya

Trachyaretaon

Trachyaretaon carmelae

Trachyaretaon sp. 2 (Mt. Osiao)

Trachyaretaon bresseeli** 'Marinfata'
(Trachyaretaon echinatus)*

Trachyaretaon sp. 4 (Sierra Madre)

Trachyaretaon sp. 3 (Barlig)* =
Trachyaretaon maliit**

Trachyaretaon sp. 5 (Sierra Madre) =
Trachyaretaon sp. 1 (Mt. Pullol)

Relationships of the Trachyaretaon species or stocks and their sister genera examined so far by genetic analysis according to Sarah Bank et al. (2021),[9] *original species assignment, **species assignment updated according to Frank Hennemann (2023)[2]

Taxonomy

In 1939 James Abram Garfield Rehn and his son John William Holman Rehn established the genus Aretaon with the subgenus Trachyaretaon. In this they placed a species already described as Obrimus echinatus in 1877.[6] While "Aretaon" is borrowed from Greek mythology, where it is among other things the name of a defender of Troy, the Prefix "Trachy" comes from the Greek trachys (τραχύς), which means rough and refers to the texture of the body surface. Trachyaretaon was transferred in 2004 by Oliver Zompro to the rank of a genus, whose type species thereby became Trachyaretaon echinatus. In addition, with Trachyaretaon gatla another species was described.[7]

In 2005 Ireneo L. Lit, Jr. and Orlando L. Eusebio described Trachyaretaon carmelae, the largest species of the genus to date. The description was based on specimens collected the year before on the island of Dalupiri. Already in 2003 animals were found on the neighboring island of Calayan, which were described by Oskar V. Conle and Frank H. Hennemann as Trachyaretaon brueckneri in 2006. Since the publication of the description was delayed, it overlapped with that of Lit and Eusebio. A short time later, Conle and Hennemann discovered that Trachyaretaon brueckneri is the same species previously described as Trachyaretaon carmelae. Since then, they have also given Trachyaretaon carmelae as a valid name for Trachyaretaon brueckneri. A formal synonymization took place in 2023 along with the description of six additional species.[1][2][10][11]

In May 2008 Jeffebeck Arimas collected specimens from the volcanoes Kanlaon and Mandalagan on Negros Island, which were initially known as Trachyaretaon sp. 'Negros'. In 2021 published genetic analysis carried out on the phylogeny of the Heteropterygidae show that this species does not belong to Trachyaretaon. It is more closely related to Sungaya, with which it has already been crossed.[12][9][13] Hennemann described it in 2023 as Trachyaretaon negrosanon.[2]

The species described so far are:[1][2][10]

(Syn. = Trachyaretaon brueckneri Conle & Hennemann, 2006)

In 2005 Lit and Eusebio described another species as Trachyaretaon manobo, which was found on Mount Apo on Mindanao. A short time later, specialists such as Joachim Bresseel assumed that this species was not a member of the genus Trachyaretaon, but rather the Mearnsiana bullosa described in 1939. In 2016, Hennemann et al synonymized Trachyaretaon manobo with Mearnsiana bullosa.[10][14][15]

In terraristics

References

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