“…In the past decade, our understanding of the evolutionary diversification of grylloblattids has grown, giving prospect to elaborating other aspects of their biology, in particular their ecology, physiology and behaviour. Specific accomplishments include clarification and extension of grylloblattid geographic distributions (Schoville, ; Schoville & Graening, ), species richness patterns (Kim & Lee, ; Bai et al , ; Schoville & Roderick, ; Schoville, ; Schoville et al , ), phylogenetic relationships (Klass et al , ; Terry & Whiting, ; Jarvis & Whiting, ; Schoville & Kim, ; Schoville et al , ) and morphological variation (Dallai et al , ; Uchifune & Machida, ; Wipfler et al , ) in Asia and North America. Problems revealed in Grylloblattidae systematics include uncertainty in the relationship of extant species to fossil ‘grylloblattids’ (Béthoux et al , ; Cui, ), paraphyly of the genera Namkungia Storozhenko & Park and Galloisiana Caudell (Schoville & Kim, ), the many undescribed cryptic species (Jarvis & Whiting, ; Schoville & Roderick, ; Schoville et al , ), and a highly divergent lineage of Galloisiana from northern Japan that may warrant generic status (Schoville et al , ).…”