Abstract
At the time of writing this little paper, the genus Isophya contains 90 valid species and 11 subspecies, according to Orthoptera Species File Online (Eades & Otte), subsequently abbreviated OSF. The distribution of these brachypterous katydids comprises Europe and western Asia, with most species occurring in the eastern Mediterranean. Only six of the species are from South America. In a revision of the genus Ramme (1951) excluded the neotropical species, which he considered to belong to a particular genus (footnote p. 136). In 1960, encouraged by Uvarov, Karabag already had transferred two Isophya species from Paraguay to his new genus Anisophya: A. hamata and, although not explicitly, A. borellii (both Giglio-Tos 1894). He was unable to study the types of any neotropical “Isophya” species, and based the diagnosis on a male and a female in the Natural History Museum, London, that have been identified by “some unknown authority” as I. hamata. He mentioned also 3 females identified as I. borellii, as well as 2 males and 1 female from Brazil that were not identified to species level. In the introduction to a recent revision of Isophya species from Turkey, Űnal (2003) wrote that the generic affinity of the neotropical species needed confirmation. After identifying a very recently collected female of “I. brasiliensis”, which shares all diagnostic features Karabag listed for his genus Anisophya, I decided to finally move the remaining six neotropical “Isophya” species to that genus.
References
Brunner von Wattenwyl, C. (1878) Monographie der Phaneropteriden. Verhandlungen der Kaiserlich-Königlichen Zoologisch-Botanischen Gesellschaft in Wien, 28, 1–401.
Eades, D.C. & Otte, D. (2010) Orthoptera Species File Online. Version 2.0/3.5. Available from http://Orthoptera.SpeciesFile.org (accessed March 2010)
Giglio-Tos, E. (1894) Ortotteri del viaggio dell dott. Alfredo Borelli nella Republica Argentina e nel Paraguay. VII. Bollettino dei Musei di Zoologia ed Anatomia Comparata della R. Università di Torino, 9(184), 1–46.
Giglio-Tos, E. (1897) Viaggio del Dott. A. Borelli nel Chaco Boliviano e nella Republica Argentina. X. Ortotteri. Bollettino dei Musei di Zoologia ed Anatomia Comparata della R. Università di Torino, 12(302), 1–47.
Giglio-Tos, E. (1898) Viaggio del Dr. Enrico Festa nella Republica dell'Ecuador et regioni vicine. VI. Ortotteri. Bollettino dei Musei di Zoologia ed Anatomia Comparata della R. Università di Torino, 13(311), 1–108.
Karabag, T. (1960) A new South American genus of Phaneropterinae. Eos, Revista española de Entomología, 36, 413–415.
Karsch, F.A.F. (1889) Orthopterologische Mittheilungen. 3. Über von Herrn Oskar Schönemann in Chile gesammelten Phaneropteriden. Entomologische Nachrichten Berlin, 15(7–8), 124–127.
Kirby, W.F. (1906) Orthoptera Saltatoria. Part I. (Achetidae et Phasgonuridae.). A Synonymic Catalogue of Orthoptera (Orthoptera Saltatoria, Locustidae vel Acridiidae). British Museum (Natural History), London, 562 pp.
Ramme, W. (1951) Zur Systematik Faunistik und Biologie der Orthopteren von Südost-Europa und Vorderasien. Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum in Berlin, 27, 1–431.
Rehn, J.A.G. (1907) Orthoptera of the families Tettigoniidae and Gryllidae from Sapucay, Paraguay. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, 59, 370–395.
Rehn, J.A.G. (1911) Notes on Paraguayan Orthoptera, with descriptions of a new genus and four new species. Entomological News, 22, 247–258.
Stål, C. (1861) Orthoptera species novas descripsit. Kongliga Svenska fregatten Eugenies Resa omkring jorden under befal af C.A. Virgin åren 1851–1853 (Zoologi). Norstedt & Söner, Stockholm, pp. 299–350.
Ünal, M. (2003) The genus Isophya Brunner von Wattenwyl (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae) from the Bati Karadeniz Region of Turkey, NW Anatolia. Journal of Orthoptera Research, 12(2), 93–103.