A taxonomic outline of the Poecilimon affinis complex (Orthoptera) using the geometric morphometric approach

The genus Poecilimon contains 145 species, widely distributed in the Palaearctic, among which the Poecilimon ornatus group has the greatest diversity in the Balkans. Despite several revisions of the genus, the systematics of the species group, and in particular, of the taxa associated with the species Poecilimon affinis, is still unsolved. Due to morphological similarity, P. affinis with its subspecies, P. nonveilleri and P. pseudornatus form the Poecilimon affinis complex. The aim of this study is to test the hypotheses of an outlined species complex, namely the P. affinis complex, within the P. ornatus group using morphological data. Geometric analysis was conducted to explore variation in the structure of the male tegmen, ovipositor, male cercus, and male pronotum. The number of teeth and stridulatory file measurements provided additional information on morphological variation within the complex. A phylogenetic tree based on the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene (COI) was used for comparison with the morphological data. Canonical variate analysis showed that male tegmen and male cercus are good morphostructures to distinguish the taxa belonging to the P. affinis complex from other species in the P. ornatus group. This may confirm our assumption for the designation of the P. affinis complex. The results of the principal component analysis of stridulatory file measurements, molecular data, and CVA of the ovipositor suggest adding two additional species to the complex: P. ornatus and P. hoelzeli.


INTRODUCTION
Poecilimon Fischer, 1853 is one of the most species-rich genera within the Phaneropterinae subfamily. This genus comprises 145 species distributed in the Palearctic region (Cigliano et al., 2021). All species are short-winged and flightless herbivorous bush-crickets with complex acoustic behavior (Heller, 1990). Poecilimon is currently divided into 18 species groups based on molecular, morphological and bioacoustic data, while 16 species are not assigned to any of them (Cigliano et al., 2021). The similarity and variability of morphological characteristics make many Poecilimon species difficult to identify. The Poecilimon ornatus group (13 species and five subspecies) (Fig. 1) is one of the groups for which the phylogenetic relationships between species remain unclear and the status of several taxa is under discussion. Due to the reduced wings and the influence of climatic Morphological variability in these taxa was determined only based on minor differences in the shape of the male pronotum and body size (Chobanov & Heller, 2010). Furthermore, song of P. a. komareki and P. rumijae resembles that of P. pseudornatus with a long silent beginning. Song of P. nonveilleri is short with a typical structure, whereas P. a. affinis has also short song and shows morphological differences to P. nonveilleri (own unpublished data). Due to the discrepancy between the authors, P. rumijae will also be treated separately in the present study. Poecilimon pseudornatus, P. nonveilleri and the subspecies of P. affinis are morphologically similar, although a recent molecular study based on the cytochrome c oxidase I gene has shown that the above taxa do not form a monophyletic group (Kociński, 2020). The lack of clear boundaries between them and the unsolved phylogenetic relationship suggest that P. pseudornatus, P. nonveilleri and subspecies of P. affinis should be treated as the P. affinis complex.
The 'species complex' is an informal taxonomic term showing the uncertainty of taxonomic identification (Sigovini, Keppel & Tagliapietra, 2016) and it is commonly used in insects (e.g., Genier & Moretto, 2017;Manani et al., 2017;Elfekih et al., 2018;Selnekovič & Kodada, 2019). It may be defined as a group of very closely-related taxa with similar morphology and difficult to distinguish from one another. Taxa from a complex require a critical revision in order to clarify the actual taxonomic position (Sigovini, Keppel & Tagliapietra, 2016).
To determine the morphological variation of the Poecilimon ornatus group, especially within the Poecilimon affinis complex, we used geometric morphometric methods based on the shape variation of four structures: male pronotum, male cercus, ovipositor, and male tegmen (Fig. 2). Geometric morphometrics is an approach that applies the landmark coordinates, which are the correspondence points marked on a given morphostructure and are the same in all studied specimens or species (Bookstein, 1991;Dryden & Mardia, 1998). This method considers the spatial relationships between landmark variables, therefore providing more powerful statistical results. It is also possible to find and analyze shape variations in the species within and between populations (Walker & Bell, 2000). The geometric morphometric method has been proved to be very useful for distinguishing species in insects (Nunes et al., 2012;Prado-Silva et al., 2016;Da Silva et al., 2018), especially in Orthoptera (Romero, Rosetti & Remis, 2014;Barcebal et al., 2015;Kaya, Boztepe & Çiplak, 2015;Mugleston et al., 2016;Bian & Shi, 2018;Pan, Hong & Jiang, 2018;Liu, Chen & Liu, 2020). The aim of the present study is to assess the morphological diversity of the species within the P. ornatus group, outline morpho-units and discuss the importance of morphological traits for the systematics of the group. We test the hypothesis of the existence of the P. affinis complex.

Specimen collection
Bush-crickets were collected in the Balkan Peninsula (Bulgaria, Serbia, Montenegro, Albania, North Macedonia, Greece) between 2017 and 2019 and stored in 96% ethanol (Table 1). In Greece, field studies were approved by the Greek Ministry of the Environmental, Energy, and Climate Change (No 154812/951). In Bulgaria, we did not need a permit for collecting for scientific purposes because it was outside protected areas, and animals were not protected. The material was collected with scientific purpose through scientific activities of the Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research-BAS. In North Macedonia, the material was collected with collaboration with the Macedonian Ecological Society (https://mes.org.mk/en/) and the Biology Students' Research Society during their field studies with the respective permissions provided. In Montenegro, Serbia, and Albania we did not need a permit for collecting for scientific purposes because it was outside protected areas, and animals were not protected.

Geometric morphometrics
In total, 196 specimens belonging to 16 taxa of the Poecilimon ornatus group were used for geometric morphometric analyses. Four morphostructures (male pronotum, male cercus, ovipositor, and male tegmen) were photographed using a stereomicroscope (Leica M165C) equipped with a digital camera (Leica DMC5400) under strictly maintained magnification and resolution and saved in jpg format. TPS files for each structure were created from the photographs with the software tpsUtil v.1.26 following Rohlf (2004). To explore the patterns of morphological variation, 8 landmarks (including 1 semilandmark) of male pronotum, 13 (7 semilandmarks) of male cercus, 13 (1 semilandmark) of male tegmen, and 9 (2 semilandmarks) of ovipositor ( Fig. 2) were plotted manually in tpsDIG2 v.2.17 (Rohlf, 2015). The list of landmarks and semilandmarks used in this study is included in Table 2. After plotting the landmarks, the intersections marked in the TPS files were aligned using a Procrustes superimposition. Partial warp scores were studied using Canonical variate Poecilimon artedentatus (Heller, 1984) --2 -
analysis (CVA) for each structure in MorphoJ v.1.06d (Klingenberg, 2011). The first two Canonical Variables (CVs) with the greatest power to distinguish the groups were plotted in the same software. The Mahalanobis distance was measured and statistically tested using 10,000 permutation repeats.

Stridulatory measurements
The length of the stridulatory file was measured and the number of stridulatory teeth was counted for 154 specimens from the P. ornatus group (9 specimens of P. affinis ssp., 24 -P. affinis affinis, 1-P. affinis dinaricus, 7-P. affinis hajlensis, 5 -P. affinis komareki, 12 -P. affinis serbicus, 8 -P. hoelzeli, 3 -P. jablanicensis, 15 -P. nobilis, 10 -P. nonveilleri, 12 -P. obesus, 10 -P. ornatus, 29 -P. pseudornatus, 8 -P. soulion). Measurements were taken under stereomicroscope with the aid of an ocular micrometer. For measurement of the stridulatory file length, we used the distance from the first proximal (basal) to the last distal (apical) tooth. The tegmen was placed upside down so that the stridulatory file could be viewed with its proximal and distal ends being at the same level. This way, the distance between the ends was measured along the imaginary line connecting those. The total number of stridulatory teeth and the number of teeth within 2 mm at the middle of the stridulatory file were counted. Measurement data were analyzed using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) in Past 4.03 (https://www.nhm.uio.no/english/research/infrastructure/past/).

Phylogenetic analyses
A fragment of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was used to determine the phylogenetic relationship between the taxa. We aimed to construct a phylogenetic tree focusing on the species of the P. affinis complex. A total of 71 sequences of 14 Poecilimon taxa were obtained from GenBank (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/). The DNA sequences were aligned using CodonCode Aligner 9.0.2 (https://www.codoncode.com/aligner) with default parameters. The maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference (BI) analyses were used to infer the phylogenetic relationships. The best-fit model of nucleotide substitution was determined with jModelTest2 (Guindon & Gascuel, 2003;Darriba et al., 2013). ML was performed in IQ-TREE (Nguyen et al., 2015), whereas BI in MrBayes 3.2. (Ronquist et al., 2012). For bootstrap analyses, 1,000 pseudoreplicates were generated. BI was carried out with 10,000,000 generations, with a sampling of trees every 100 generations. Likelihood values were observed with Tracer v.1.7 (Rambaut et al., 2018). The tree was visualized in FigTree 1.4.4 (Rambaut, 2018).

Morphology
As a result, 54 images of ovipositor, 130 of male tegmen, 142 of male pronotum, and 141 of male cercus were used in the analyses. In some specimens, tegmen and cercus were damaged and not used for this study. The landmarks were chosen based on the shape and structure of the ovipositor (seven landmarks, two semilandmarks) ( Fig. 2A), male cercus (six landmarks, seven semilandmarks) (Fig. 2B), male pronotum (seven landmarks, one semilandmark) (Fig. 2C), and male tegmen (12 landmarks, one semilandmark) (Fig. 2D). CV analysis of the male tegmen ( Fig. 3) revealed significant variation within the P. ornatus group and P. affinis complex. At the species group level, the first two CV analyses together accounted for 77.72% of the total variation (CV1 = 55.64%, CV2 = 22.08%). A combination of the results of the CV1 and CV2 analyses of the male tegmen separated the species P. hoelzeli, P. obesus, P. jablanicensis and P. nobilis from the other species of the Poecilimon ornatus group and revealed an overlap between P. pseudornatus, P. poecilus, P. nonveilleri, and P. affinis (Fig. 3A). The Mahalanobis distance obtained through pairwise comparisons among the group revealed highly significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.50 (P. affinis and P. pseudornatus) to 19.66 (P. poecilus and P. obesus). The Procrustes distances also showed significant differences between groups (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001) ranging from 0.03 (P. poecilus and P. pseudornatus) to 0.28 (P. nobilis and P. obesus) (Table S1).
At the species complex level, the first two CVs together accounted for 83.92% of the total variation of the ovipositor (CV1 = 70.26% and CV2 = 13.66%) (Fig. 4B). The centroid size (the square root of the sum of the squared distances of all landmarks from their centroid) of CV1 and CV2 shows that species from the Poecilimon affinis complex can be clearly separated from each other (Fig. 4B). The Mahalanobis distances obtained through pairwise comparisons of the complex revealed highly significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.69 (P. rumijae and P. a. affinis) to 14.50 (P. pseudornatus and P. a. hajlensis). The Procrustes distances also showed highly significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0,005), ranging from 0.03 (P. a. serbicus and P. a. affinis) to 0.15 (P. a. komareki and P. a. dinaricus) (Table S4). CV analysis of the male cercus (Fig. 5) also revealed significant variation within the P. ornatus group and the P. affinis complex. At the group level, the first two CVs together accounted for 69.82% of the total variation (CV1 = 40.59%, CV2 = 29.23%). The scatter plot from CV1 and CV2 shows that species from the Poecilimon affinis complex can be clearly separated from other species of the Poecilimon ornatus group (Fig. 5A). The Mahalanobis distances obtained through pairwise comparisons among group revealed highly significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.71 (P. pseudornatus and P. affinis) to 12.25 (P. hoelzeli and P. jablanicensis). The Procrustes distances also showed significant differences between groups (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 0.03 (P. affinis and P. pseudornatus) to 0.17 (P. pseudornatus and P. nobilis) (Table S5).
For the male cercus, at the complex level, the first two CVs together accounted for 54.33% of the total variation (CV1 = 30.38% and CV2 = 23.95%). The centroid size of CV1 and CV2 shows that only P. a. affinis, P. rumijae, P. a. komareki, and P. nonveilleri can be clearly separated from other members of the P. affinis complex (Fig. 5B). The Mahalanobis distances obtained through pairwise comparisons of the complex revealed significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.87 (P. pseudornatus and P. a. hajlensis) to 8.65 (P. a. dinaricus and P. a. komareki). The Procrustes distances also showed significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 0.03 (P. a. affinis and P. poecilus) to 0.10 (P. a. komareki and P. nonveilleri) (Table S6).
For the male pronotum, at the group level, the first two CVs together accounted for 75.84% of the total variation (CV1 = 57.24%, CV2 = 18,60%) (Fig. 6). The scatter plot from CV1 and CV2 shows that species from the Poecilimon affinis complex cannot be clearly separated from other species of the Poecilimon ornatus group (Fig. 6A). The Mahalanobis distances obtained through pairwise comparisons among group revealed significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.20 (P. poecilus and P. affinis) to 12.81 (P. gracilis and P. obesus). The Procrustes distances also showed significant differences between groups (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 0.03 (P. poecilus and P. affinis) to 0.16 (P. gracilis and P. jablanicensis) (Table  S7). At the complex level, the first two CVs together accounted for 72.01% of the total variation of the male pronotum (CV1 = 46.56% and CV2 = 25.45%). The centroid size of CV1 and CV2 shows that only P. rumijae can be clearly separated from other species from the P. affinis complex (Fig. 6B). The Mahalanobis distances obtained through pairwise comparisons of the complex revealed significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 2.73 (P. a. hajlensis and P. a. affinis) to 5.68 (P. rumijae and P. nonveilleri). The Procrustes distances also showed highly significant differences (10,000 permutation rounds; P < 0.0001), ranging from 0.04 (P. poecilus and P. a. affinis) to 0.14 (P. rumijae and P. nonveilleri) (Table S8).

Stridulatory measurements
Poecilimon soulion and P. jablanicensis have the shortest stridulatory file of all studied species (2.74-3.17 and 2.96-3.04, respectively). In contrast, P. affinis komareki has the longest stridulatory file (5. 34-5.88) and the greatest number of teeth on its structure . Poecilimon obesus has the lowest number of teeth, which proves that the length of the stridulatory file does not correlate with the number of teeth (Table 3). Principal Component Analysis of the stridulatory file and the number of teeth shows that P. nonveilleri, P. ornatus, P. hoelzeli, P. pseudornatus, P. a. serbicus, P. a. hajlensis, and P. a. affinis overlap. Moreover, we can conclude that P. a. affinis is the most diverse taxon within the P. ornatus group, while P. a. komareki is the most distinct taxon of the studied group (Fig. 7).

Phylogenetic analyses
The final alignment consists of 607 bp, of which 450 were conservative, 157 variable and 83 parsimony-informative sites. HKY+G was selected as the best-fit evolution model for site substitution. The topologies obtained from BI and ML analyses were similar. Bootstrap values (ML) (>50%) and BI posterior probabilities (>0.5) are shown on the nodes of the tree presented on Fig. 8. To root the tree, Poecilimon cervus Karabag, 1950, belonging to the Poecilimon bosphoricus Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1878 species group, was chosen. The BI and ML trees based on the COI data show that the P. affinis complex forms a paraphyletic group. The most diverse taxon in the complex is P. a. affinis, occupying different nodes on the phylogenetic tree grouping by geographic locality. Poecilimon a. affinis from Kirilova Polyana (Bulgaria, Rila Mtns) occupies a basal position in the tree and seems to be a sister taxon to the remaining taxa of the complex. Two species of the P. ornatus group, preliminary left outside the P. affinis complex, P. ornatus and P. hoelzeli, were placed within the same clade (Fig. 8).

Morphology
This work aimed to determine the morphological characteristics that separate bush-crickets belonging to the P. affinis complex from other species of the P. ornatus group through the geometric morphometrics approach. The morphology of the male tegmen, ovipositor, cercus and male pronotum were used successfully in morphological studies of Poecilimon (Heller, 2004;Chobanov & Heller, 2010;Kaya et al., 2012;Kaya, Boztepe & Çiplak, 2015;Kaya et al., 2018). The present work showed that the studied morphostructures can partly be used to separate taxa of the species rank in the Poecilimon ornatus group. Chobanov & Heller (2010) noticed that the pronotal shape and the size of the area of the male tegmen covered by the male pronotum vary between specimens from the same locality. Our results support the poor taxonomic utility of the shape of male pronotum in this group for distinguishing the species belonging to the P. affinis complex from other species in the group (Fig. 6A). However, based on the shape of the male tegmen, P. affinis and its subspecies group with P. nonveilleri, P. pseudornatus in the same place, which clearly separates them from other species (Fig. 3A). This may confirm our assumption for the designation of the P. affinis complex including other species from the Poecilimon ornatus group. CV analysis of centroid sizes of the male pronotum (Fig. 6B) shows that P. rumijae is the most distinct taxon among the P. affinis complex, and does not overlap with P. a. komareki. Poecilimon rumijae may likely be treated as a separate species of the P. ornatus group, differing distinctly from subspecies of P. affinis (Ingrisch & Pavicevic, 2010), but further studies are required to confirm its taxonomic position. This assumption is also confirmed by the analysis of the ovipositor, where P. a. komareki is more similar to P. a. dinaricus and P. pseudornatus, whereas P. rumijae is more similar to P. a. affinis (Fig. 4B). On the other hand, the results based on the male cercus ( Fig. 5B) show that P. a. komareki and P. rumijae overlap, which proves high similarities within this morphostructure and may confirm the accuracy of lowering P. rumijae to the rank synonymous with P. a. komareki (Chobanov & Heller, 2010;Cigliano et al., 2021). Ingrisch & Pavicevic (2010) considered P. rumijae to be similar to P. nonveilleri and P. affinis. Our results confirm a close relationship between P. rumijae and P. affinis, but not between P. rumijae and P. nonveilleri, which, according to all morphostructures, are the most distant from each other (Figs. 3A, 4A, 5A, 6A). The most distinct species in our sample is P. nobilis based on the analysis of the male tegmen (Fig. 3A) and male cercus (Fig. 5A), P. gracilis based on the ovipositor (Fig. 4A), and P. obesus based on the male pronotum (Fig. 6A), which suggest not to include these species in the P. affinis complex. On the other hand, P. affinis is the most diffuse taxon in the group (Figs. 3A, 4A, 5A, 6A). The results suggest that the difference between specimens of P. a. affinis is related to the locality in which they occur (Fig. 3B), and is generally connected with altitude (Chobanov & Heller, 2010). Specimens of P. a. affinis from Pirin are distant from individuals from Bratiya, Kirilowa Polyana, Osogovo, Rila and are more closely related to P. poecilus, P. a. hajlensis and P. a. komareki (Fig. 3B). On the other hand, the position of the centroid size of P. pseudornatus from different localities (Durmitor, Kamena Gora, Treshnievik, Vusanje) overlaps, which proves a lower morphological variability in terms of location than in the case of P. a. affinis (Fig. 3B). At the group level, based on the male cercus (Fig. 5A), species from the P. affinis complex (P. affinis with its subspecies, P. nonveilleri and P. pseudornatus) overlap. Thus, this is the second morphostructure to confirm the existence of this complex. Additionally, Chobanov & Heller (2010) suggested that the male cercus may be a better feature for separating species in this group. The results of the CV analysis of centroid size of the ovipositor (Fig. 4A) show the similarity between P. affinis, P. hoelzeli, P. pseudornatus, P. poecilus, and P. nonveilleri, which may indicate the extension of the P. affinis complex with P. hoelzeli (Fig. 4A). Poecilimon poecilus, which we suggested to treat separately in this work, seems to fell within the variation of P. a. affinis. It is confirmed by all the morphostructures studied, where P. poecilus overlaps with other subspecies: P. a. affinis, P. a. hajlensis, P. a. komareki (Figs. 3A, 4A, 5A, 6A). However, to establish the taxonomic status of P. poecilus, additional research is needed.

Stridulatory structures measurements
The stridulatory file and the number of teeth can be a good morphological feature for distinguishing taxa in the P. ornatus group (Heller, 1984;Willemse, 1985;Heller, 1988;Chobanov & Heller, 2010). Heller (1988) reports that P. ornatus has fewer teeth than P. affinis, about 158-212, with some exceptions of large specimens having up to 220 teeth, as confirmed by our results (Table 3). The length of stridulatory file is the same in both species and averaged 4.08. Thus, this morphostructure and the number of teeth are not a good feature for distinguishing P. affinis from P. ornatus. Heller (1984) observed about 220-230 teeth in P. affinis species, while Chobanov & Heller (2010) observed 180-240. They suggest that the number is generally more variable in southeastern populations (SW Bulgaria). The lowest number of teeth is found in small specimens from high altitudes. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) shows a similarity between three subspecies (P. a. affinis, P. a. serbicus and P. a. hajlensis) (Fig. 7). On the other hand, P. a. komareki does not overlap with other subspecies, which may mean that it is the most distinct taxon from all studied taxa of the P. ornatus group. Poecilimon hoelzeli and P. pseudornatus have a similar number of teeth and length of the stridulatory file. Poecilimon ornatus, P. nonveilleri, P. a. affinis, P. a. hajlensis, P. a. serbicus, P. pseudornatus and P. hoelzeli overlap, which can suggest that P. hoelzeli and P. ornatus should be included in the designated P. affinis complex.

Phylogenetic data
The first genetic studies using ribosomal internal transcribed spacers (ITS1 and 2) and the mitochondrial genes (16S rRNA, tRNA-Val, 12S rRNA) involving some of the group's species were conducted by Ullrich et al. (2010). However, they did not provide conclusive information on the relationship between species in this group. Kociński (2020) performed a genetic analysis based on the cytochrome c oxidase I gene (COI) of the P. ornatus group, and confirmed the monophyly of this group. Our results, focusing on species from the P. affinis complex, show that it forms a paraphyletic group (Fig. 8). Two additional species, P. hoelzeli and P. ornatus, are distributed with the other taxa of the complex, thus they probably should be included in the P. affinis complex determined previously. This assumption is similar to the results of the CVA of the ovipositor, where taxa from the complex overlap with P. hoelzeli (Fig. 4A). Moreover, based on the phylogenetic tree (Fig.  8), P. a. affinis is the most diverse species in the complex, occupying different nodes, which is supported by the CVA results of the male tegmen (Fig. 3B). The variability is related to the location (Bratiya, Kirilova Polyana, Rila, Yavorow) of the populations of P. a. affinis, and is connected with the altitude of occurrence (Chobanov & Heller, 2010). Poecilimon a. komareki and P. rumijae form different nodes, which may suggest treating them as separate taxa of the P. ornatus group. This opinion is confirmed by the CVA results of male pronotum and ovipositor (Figs. 4B, 6B). The specimens from P. poecilus also form different nodes compared to P. a. affinis, thus, it may be treated as a subspecies of P. affinis, which is supported by the CVA of the male tegmen, male cercus, ovipositor, and male pronotum (Figs. 3B, 4B, 5B, 6B).

CONCLUSIONS
The geometric morphometric method has proven to be useful in studying the morphological diversity of bush-crickets. Combined with the analysis of the stridulatory file and molecular phylogeny, it provides better insight into the relationships between species from the Poecilimon ornatus group, and in particular, the taxa of the Poecilimon affinis complex. Morphological analysis of selected morphostructures and molecular data showed the paraphyly of the P. affinis complex unless P. ornatus and P. hoelzeli are included. Additionally, the taxonomic status of P. rumijae and P. poecilus remains unclear. Our results show some discordances with previous studies and point to the need for a most thorough interdisciplinary phenetic and genetic study in order to solve the systematics of this particular group of bush-crickets.
• Georgi Hristov analyzed the data, authored or reviewed drafts of the paper, and approved the final draft.
• Dragan Chobanov conceived and designed the experiments, authored or reviewed drafts of the paper, and approved the final draft.

Field Study Permissions
The following information was supplied relating to field study approvals (i.e., approving body and any reference numbers): In Greece, field studies were approved by the Greek Ministry of the Environment, Energy, and Climate Change.
In Bulgaria, we did not need a permit for collecting for scientific purposes because it was outside protected areas, and animals were not protected. The material was collected with scientific purpose through scientific activities of the Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research-BAS. In North Macedonia, the material was collected with collaboration with the Macedonian Ecological Society (https://mes.org.mk/en/) and the Biology Students' Research Society during their field studies with the respective permissions provided. In Montenegro and Albania, we did not need a permit for collecting for scientific purposes because it was outside protected areas, and animals were not protected.
In Serbia, we also did not need a permit for collecting insects because it was outside protected areas, and animals were not protected.

Data Availability
The following information was supplied regarding data availability: The 4 morphostructures (male tegmen, ovipositor, cercus, male pronotum) and the localization of each landmark of each specimen and the measurements of the stridulatory's file and the number of teeth of each specimen are available in the Supplementary Files.