BIOL 286 Lecture 18 ORTHOPTERA With Annotations
BIOL 286 Lecture 18 ORTHOPTERA With Annotations
BIOL 286 Lecture 18 ORTHOPTERA With Annotations
Lecture 18
ORDER ORTHOPTERA
FEATURES
• Large insects
• Body is elongate
• Cerci well developed
• Antennae long
• Chewing mouthparts
• Simple metamorphosis
Features (cont’d)
a. Jumping
b. Camouflage
c. Kicking with hind legs (spines on
tibia)
d. Shed a leg if grabbed by predator
e. Some suddenly open wings
displaying flashy coloration on hind
wing/startle predators
f. Flying then suddenly shutting wings
and dropping to ground.
Sound production in the Caelifera
• Done mainly by males (calling songs) to attract
females during courtship.
• Songs achieved by stridulation = rubbing one body
organ against another.
• Rubbing a file on hind femur against a scraper on
front wing.
File
• Songs are species specific.
• They are distinguished by their pulse (1 stroke of
scraper over file) and rhythm = temporal pattern
of pulses.
• Ex:
• Similar to Caelifera
• Chewing mouthparts
• Phytophagous
• Legs adapted for jumping.
Major morphological differences from Caelifera:
Features:
• Chewing
• Phytophagous; occasionally forest pests
(especially on eucalyptus trees)
• Elongated body
• Wings reduced or absent
• Very slow moving
• Do not jump
Defenses
• All stages are camouflaged:
nymphs and adults are leaf or stick mimics
eggs are seed mimics
• Some species spray caustic sprays from
glands in prothorax
• Can readily shed their leg if grabbed (unlike
most insects, can regenerate a leg even in
adult stage)
Eggs
• For few species with reduced wings, can
open hind wing and startle flash of color.
D. FAMILY MANTIDAE: Praying mantis
• Most tropical; large; elongate
bodies
• Slow moving.
• Raptorial front legs: front tibia and
femora armed with strong spines.
• Head is freely movable
• Elongated prothorax
Lifestyle of mantids
• Predaceous
• Feed on a variety of insects
including other mantis
• Usually lie in wait for prey with
front legs in upright position.
• Often, well camouflaged
• Mimic leaves, bird droppings, and
flowers.
MATING
Female usually eats male’s head.
She often decapitates him during copulation or after.
Possibilities:
• By only mating with males which courted her properly and eating
those others which did not, a female may ensure that her male
offspring will inherit the successful courtship behavior.
• Decapitation of male’s head releases the male’s genitalia from
nervous inhibition from the brain and leads to better copulation.
The terminal abdominal ganglion is developed to control genitalia
without brain, but, the subesophageal ganglion sends inhibitory
impulses to genitalia. Decapitation releases this inhibition.
• Male’ proteins are incorporated into the eggs.
Oviposition:
Female lays eggs laid in a frothy eggs-case.
Ootheca
• Cryptic coloration
• Run away then quick flight
• Can open wings and display bright coloration
• Shed a leg (can regenerate a leg only if
mantis is young)
• Stab enemy with spiny legs.
E. Family Blattidae: cockroaches
• Extremely ancient group (250 M years ago)
• Found everywhere; most are tropical.
• Cursorial animals: run very fast.
• Oval, flattened body; head concealed below
the pronotum.
• Wings present.
• Long cerci; long antennae.
• Stridulatory organs and tympana are absent
• Chewing mouthparts
• General feeders; primarily scavengers.
• Some are serious house pests.
• Not known to be a specific vector of
diseases
• But, can mechanically transmit diseases,
ex. Salmonella.
• Difficult to eradicate.
• Escape quickly, sense air vibrations
through cerci.
• Long-lived (1-4 years)
• Can produce many offspring (up to
1000 eggs).
• Unusual cockroaches:
Wood eating cockroaches digest
cellulose with help of symbionts in
their gut.
Evolutionary trends in relationship
between mother and embryos:
Eggs generally enclosed in hard case = ootheca.