Ammopelmatus Kelsoensis
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''Ammopelmatus kelsoensis'', commonly known as the Kelso Jerusalem cricket, is a species of insect in the family
Stenopelmatidae The family Stenopelmatidae is composed of large, mostly flightless insects resembling crickets (the family Gryllidae). Two genera: ''Ammopelmatus'' and the type genus ''Stenopelmatus'' are found in the New World. ''Oryctopus'' and ''Sia'' are Old ...
. It is endemic to the Kelso Dunes in the United States. Despite intensive collecting, all specimens have only been found at Point Conception.


Description

Jerusalem crickets are large, striking orthopteran insects. The genus Ammopelmatus differs from other genera of stenopelmatine crickets in the following characters: *Having vestigial or absent tibial spines on the apical dorsal margins of the caudal tibiae *Median or presubapical spur on the ventral surface of the foretibiae absent


Diagnostic Characteristics

Leg characters, such as the form of spines and spurs, are important for differentiating species in this genus. ''Ammopelmatus kelsoensis'' has short, spatulate apical tibial spurs and calcars. The fore tibia has only two small ventral spines, and the hind tibia has only one ventral one. '' Ammopelmatus muwu'' can be distinguished from ''A. kelsoensis'' by the curved apical spur on the internal margin of the fore tibia, the hind tibia with the first tooth on the internal margin, and first major tooth on the external margin of the hind tibia short and blunt. John and Rentz (1987) studied the chromosomes of this species.


Behavior and Ecology

All three known specimens were collected in a burrow of a Rhachocnemis spider colony. One specimen was feeding on a small ''Rhacocnemis'' nymph. There is little known information on the life cycle, but adults were collected in mid-summer. The short, robust legs, with their reduced spines and spurs, are well-adapted for an arenicolous, or
burrow An Eastern chipmunk at the entrance of its burrow A burrow is a hole or tunnel excavated into the ground by an animal to construct a space suitable for habitation or temporary refuge, or as a byproduct of locomotion. Burrows provide a form of sh ...
-dwelling existence.


References

Insects of the United States Orthoptera of North America Stenopelmatoidea Taxonomy articles created by Polbot Insects described in 1965 {{stenopelmatidae-stub