Dundubia vaginata[1] is the type species in its genus, sometimes called the jade-green cicada[2] (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) in the tribe Dundubiini.[3]

Dundubia vaginata
Dundubia vaginata (Similajau National Park, Malaysia)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Auchenorrhyncha
Family: Cicadidae
Subfamily: Cicadinae
Tribe: Dundubiini
Genus: Dundubia
Species:
D. vaginata
Binomial name
Dundubia vaginata
Fabricius, 1787
Synonyms
List
    • Tettigonia vaginata Fabricius, 1787 (basionym).[1]
    • Cicada virescens Olivier, 1790
    • Cicada vaginata Olivier, 1790
    • Dundubia varians Walker, F., 1850
    • Dundubia immacula Walker, F., 1850
    • Dundubia sobria Walker, F., 1850
    • Cicada mannifera Walker, F., 1850
    • Dundubia mannifera Stål, 1866
    • Dundubia mannifera immacula Distant, 1889
    • Dundubia manifera Schmidt, E., 1920
    • Fidicina mannifera Weber, H., 1931
    • Dilobopyga gemina Duffels, 1977
    • Fidicina confinis Zaidi & Ruslan, 1997
    • Dundubia vaginat Zaidi, Nordin, Maryata, Wahab, Norashikin, Catherine & Fatimah, 2002
    • Cephaloxys mannifera Pham & Thinh, 2005
    • Mogannia mannifera Pham & Thinh, 2005

Habitat and distribution

edit

Dundubia vaginata is one of the most widespread species of the genus Dundubia and typically found in tropical forests.[4] The recorded distribution is widespread throughout SE Asia: from India and China to Japan, Thailand, Malesia, through to Sulawesi and northern Australia.[2]

Description

edit

This species can have a uniform jade green colour throughout the body and has transparent wings.[2] Its colour is actually very variable and the head, thorax and abdomen vary from ochre to green through brown.[5]

Both pairs of wings are hyaline and may be slightly tinged with bronze. Males measure 35 to 45 mm and females 30 to 39 mm.[5]

The front of the head is never black. The upper part of the clypeus is twice as wide at the base as the anterior lateral margins of the vertex. The rostrum passes the intermediate coxa, barely reaching the posterior coxa. The apex of the rostrum is black.[5]

Description of the male

edit

The opercula are spoon-shaped not curved laterally and its end is rounded; twice as long as wide and not strongly constricted. These opercula cover the tymbals, and reach the fifth to seventh abdominal segment. The mesonotum may sometimes have black lines. Head, thorax and abdomen are ochre or bright green. The uncus consists of two broad and obtuse lobes. The abdomen is uniform in colour without black spots.[5]

Description of the female

edit
 
Dundubia vaginata female

The opercula do not have a lateral tooth. The mesonotum does not show black lines. The base of the abdomen is fairly pointed and slightly curved upwards. The lateral sides of the abdomen do not have black spots.[5]

Ecology

edit

The life cycle of Dundubia vaginata is completed by the emergence of the imago, which lives for one to two months and is periodic.[2]

Predators of the imago include: bats[4] and Dicrurus paradiseus.[2] Caecilians may feed on larvae.[6]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Fabricius JC (1787) Ryngota. Mantissa insectorum sistens species nuper detectas adiectis synonymis, observationibus, descriptionibus, emendationibus. Hafniae, Impensis Christ. Gottl. Proft. 2: 1-382. (complete text)
  2. ^ a b c d e Leong TM, Shunari M, Eksan A, Harvey-Samuel TD (2011) The jade-green cicada, Dundubia vaginata (Fabricius, 1787) in Singapore, with notes on emergence, bioacoustics, and mating (Homoptera: Cicadidae: Cicadinae). Nature in Singapore, 4: 193–202.
  3. ^ Sanborn AF, Villet MH (2014) Catalogue of the Cicadoidea (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha). Academic Press, Elsevier, 1002 pages.
  4. ^ a b Helfert, B., Sänger, K. 1993. Final moulting of Dundubia vaginata in the Thale Ban National Park, Thailand (Homoptera: Cicadidae). Entomologia Generalis, 18(1–2): 37–41.
  5. ^ a b c d e Overmeer WPJ, Duffels JP (1967) A revisionary study of the genus Dundubia Amyot & Serville (Homoptera, Cicadidae). Beaufortia, 166: 29-59.
  6. ^ Leong TM, Lim GHS (2003) Noteworthy dietary records for Caudacaecilia larutensis and Limnonectes kuhlii from Maxwell’s Hill, Peninsular Malaysia (Amphibia: Gymnophiona and Anura). Hamadryad, 27(2): 268–270.
edit