taxonID	type	description	language	source
7870666F9EACF09649319BBFA86CF1AE.taxon	description	Description (Figs 12 - 22; Table 1). Male. Fastigium verticis slightly tapering frontward, half as wide as scapus, with a dorsal groove (Fig. 12). Head length 1.7 times the pronotum length and head width about 1.3 times the maximum pronotum width. Pronotum saddle shaped from a lateral view, paranota with concave dorsal margins, anterior and ventral borders straight, posterior edge moderately convex. Pronotal disc slightly constricted in the transverse sulcus area, with lateral carinae marginally divergent in mesozona and convex in metazona (Figs 12, 13). Wings as long as or slightly longer than pronotum, with reticulate venation, usually surpass the posterior edge of first abdominal tergite. Cu 2 vein length about 3 / 4 the posterior margin of pronotum; angle between cubital veins about 70 °. Speculum large and rectangular. Edge of tegmen at distal end of Cu 2 vein forms an obtuse angle of about 130 ° (Fig. 12). During the quiet wing openings in song production, the white anterior border of tegmen is well visible, but its role has not been established yet (see Appendix 3: Isophya dochia sp n video). Stridulatory file arcuate, 2.2 - 2.4 mm long, counts 82 - 89 teeth; distal teeth larger and rarer than proximal ones (Fig. 16). Epiproct about twice as wide as long; cercus slender, narrowing towards tip, slightly curved in its apical fourth, with fine, small hairs; terminal denticle located in middle of cercus apex (Fig. 14). Subgenital plate elongated, narrowed apically, with triangular apical incision (Fig. 15). Hind femur about 4 - 4.3 times the pronotum length, without ventral spines. Coloration green, densely punctuated with fine, dark green and brown spots. Several males with two dorso-lateral, parallel stripes from pronotum to end of abdomen, red, orange, white, violet or yellow colored. Antennae greenish-brown or reddish-brown, with light brown or green scapus. Compound eyes bicolor: upper part brownish-red and lower part green. A yellowish or white band begins behind the eye and ends at posterolateral angle of wing. Tegmina brown, dark brown or dark red, apically green and costal margin greenish-white or yellowish-white. Cerci brown or reddish-brown, green at base. Ventral side of body yellowish-green. Femora, tibiae and tarsi usually green, brownish or reddish. Female. Fastigium roughly as in male (Fig. 17). Head length 1.7 times the pronotum length and head width about 1.3 times the maximum pronotum width. Pronotum disc marginally enlarged in its posterior part, with straight lateral carinae, paranota as in males (Figs 17, 18). Wing with dense reticulate venation, surpass the posterior margin of first abdominal tergite. Stridulatory bristles located on cubital veins in the inner latero-posterior part of right tegmen (Fig. 19). Cercus short, hairy, conical (Fig. 20). Subgenital plate rounded, narrow, about twice as wide as long (Fig. 21). Ovipositor short, upcurved, 1.9 - 2.1 times the pronotum length, upper margin with 9 - 10 denticles and lower margin with 8 - 9 denticles (Fig. 22). Hind femur 3.5 - 3.7 times the pronotum length, without ventral spines. Body coloration as in males, wings light brown or green-yellowish, ovipositor green.	en	Iorgu, Ionut Stefan (2012): Acoustic analysis reveals a new cryptic bush-cricket in the Carpathian Mountains (Orthoptera, Phaneropteridae). ZooKeys 254: 1-22, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892
7870666F9EACF09649319BBFA86CF1AE.taxon	distribution	Distribution and ecology. Isophya dochia sp. n. populates mesophytic subalpine meadows at about 1600 - 1900 m, in Ceahlău Mountain Massif, Eastern Carpathians (Fig. 11). The specimens were collected from leaves of Urtica, Rubus, Veratrum, Rumex, Aconitum, Vaccinium, Hypericum, Stachys, Junniperus etc. Few other bush-crickets and grasshoppers were found occurring simpatrically with the new species: Metrioptera bicolor (Philippi), Metrioptera brachyptera (Linnaeus), Pholidoptera transsylvanica (Fischer), Miramella ebneri (Galvagni), Euthystira brachyptera (Ocskay), Myrmeleotettix maculatus (Thunberg), Chorthippus biguttulus (Linnaeus), Chorthippus parallelus (Zetterstedt) etc. The bush-cricket Isophya dochia sp. n. has the same phenology as other subalpine Isophya species: female lays her eggs isolated in holes bitten in broad leaves of Urtica, Rubus etc. Eggs pass the winter in the litter and larvae hatch in late spring, after the snow melts in the high mountains. Depending on weather, first adults exuviate in late June and live up to August.	en	Iorgu, Ionut Stefan (2012): Acoustic analysis reveals a new cryptic bush-cricket in the Carpathian Mountains (Orthoptera, Phaneropteridae). ZooKeys 254: 1-22, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892
7870666F9EACF09649319BBFA86CF1AE.taxon	etymology	Etymology. A noun in apposition; from the name of Dochia, a Romanian legendary female character based on an earlier deity of land and agriculture from the Dacian pantheon, and that of the eponymous rock in Ceahlău Mountains.	en	Iorgu, Ionut Stefan (2012): Acoustic analysis reveals a new cryptic bush-cricket in the Carpathian Mountains (Orthoptera, Phaneropteridae). ZooKeys 254: 1-22, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.254.3892
