AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Orthoptera

Discussions and information on all Southern African Invertebrates

Moderator: Klipspringer

User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

Armoured Ground Cricket, Corn Cricket, Armored Ground Katydid Acanthoplus discoidales
Family Tettigoniidae. Subfamily Heterodinae

Image
Kruger National Park, S41 © Bushcraft

Image © Super Mongoose

Image © Super Mongoose
Augrabies Falls National Park

Image © Super Mongoose

Image © Super Mongoose
Augrabies Falls National Park

Image © mposthumus
Kruger National Park

Image © Heksie
Kruger National Park, H14

Image © Kesheshe
Kruger National Park

Image © PJL
Kruger National Park, Satara

Image © Mel
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Description
A wide-bodied, flightless species that typically grows to a body length of about 5 cm. The pronotum bears several sharp, conical spines. The mandibles, or main biting jaws, are powerful; they can inflict a painful nip and they permit the insect to feed on material such as tough herbage or carrion.
This species is omnivorous and feeds opportunistically on many different foods. Especially when their diet is deficient in protein and salt, members of the species commonly become cannibalistic :shock:
These Katydids have an arsenal of defence mechanisms in response to attack. Males but not females can stridulate when attacked, while both sexes will bite and regurgitate or squirt toxic blood which in insects is called haemolymph, from gaps in their exoskeleton on their backs and under their legs upon provocation. O-/

Similar species:
Acanthoplus armativentris has two spines on the front edge of the pronotum whereas these are absent in A. discoidalis.


Distribution

A discoidales.jpg
A discoidales.jpg (64.68 KiB) Viewed 1876 times

The Armoured Katydid (Acanthoplus discoidalis) is fairly widespread throughout Botswana, Namibia, and Northern Cape Province, South Africa. Small populations are also found in the Western and Eastern Cape Provinces of South Africa.

Habitat
The species is generally associated with very dry, sparsely vegetated habitats, including the Kalahari and Namib Deserts, Succulent and Nama Karoo and Fynbos biomes.

Links: Checklist: The Armoured Crickets (Orthoptera: Bradyporidae) of South Africa; Walker, Matt (28 July 2009). "Insect defence all blood and guts". BBC Earth News.


User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

Rain Locust Lamarckiana sp. possibly L. bolivariana
Family: Pamphagidae. Subfamily: Porthetinae

Image © mposthumus
Female

Image © mposthumus
Kruger National Park, Mopani

Description
Large (body length 60-100 mm), generally uniformly grey, with very flattened antennae, and cream cheek and prothoracic stripe. Thick hind legs, covered with sharp spines. There is a hearing organ on either side of the thorax. Porthetinae exhibit a remarkable sexual dimorphism.
Males are winged with smoky black hind wings, they can fly quite well.
Females are wingless and even larger than the males. Their body is also more heavily sclerotized and covered with hard ridges and spines.

Distribution
Southern Africa.

Biology
Lamarckiana are nocturnal. Males call from trees by night.
Females are also capable of producing sound by rubbing their legs against the rough surface of the abdomen. The sound is used to startle potential predators.

Links:
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... 0/download
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1117229
Genus Lamarckiana


User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

Shieldback Locust
Family: Pamphagidae. Subfamily: Porthetinae

Image Female © mposthumus
Kruger National Park, S128 - between Tshokwane and Lower Sabie


User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

King Cricket possibly Borborothus sp.
Family: Anostostomatidae

Image © mposthumus

Image © mposthumus
Male, Kruger National Park, Pretoriuskop area

44 genera of African Anostostomatidae in 7 or 8 valid genera have been described. Roughly half of these are from South Africa. The members of this family used to be placed in either the families Stenopelmatidae, Henicidae or Mimnermidae. The most well-known species in South Africa is the 'Parktown prawn' Libanasidus vittatus which is commonly encountered in people's homes in Johannesburg. Members of the genus Henicus are almost entirely limited to the Western and Eastern Cape and recent investigations by Peter Johns have shown that there are many undescribed species and that the species of this genus tend to be highly endemic with relatively small distributions.
All species are nocturnal omnivores and most adult males have enlarged mandibles.
12 species of Nasidius have been described, but there at least another 23 undescribed species.

Links:
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/ite ... 0/mode/1up
Laurence H. Field: The Biology of Wetas, King Crickets and Their Allies; H Brettschneider: Systematics of southern African Anostostomatidae (PDF)


User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

King Cricket sp
Family: Anostostomatidae

Another unidentified King Cricket species, about 8 cm long! :shock:

Image © Richprins
Male, Nelspruit/Mbombela, Mpumalanga

There are several species of King Cricket in the Lowveld. They are nocturnal.


BluTuna
Posts: 3502
Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2012 8:44 am
Country: RSA
Location: Randburg
Contact:

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by BluTuna »

Oblong-eyed Leaf Katydid sp Eurycorypha sp
Family: Tettigoniidae. Subfamily: Phaneropterinae

Image © BluTuna

Image © BluTuna
Hartebeespoort Dam area, North West Province

Eurycorypha Leaf katydids are medium-sized (body length 22 mm), with oval and elongated eyes. Yellow stripe usually through eye. Open 'ears' on fore tibiae in males. Tegmina bend sharply, lending a hump-backed appearance.
The genus is indigenous to Sub-Saharan Africa and Madagascar. It is the most species-rich Phaneropterinae genus in Africa.


Hunting cannot be considered a sport as all contestants in a sport should know they are playing the game!
User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26615
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by Toko »

Elegant Grasshopper Zonocerus elegans
Family: Pyrgomorphidae

Image © serval
Kruger National Park

Foam grasshoppers are small to large grasshoppers distinguished by a combination of bright colours, conical head, fastigial furrow, and a pair of warty crescents on either side of the fastigial furrow. Many have warning coloration and can produce a foamy defensive secretion; a few can produce sound. Most feed on herbs or shrubs, but rarely on grasses. Mostly gregarious at all stages.

Image © Hawkeyes
Lake Eland Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal

Image

Image © Flutterby
Rietvlei Nature Reserve, Gauteng


Image © PJL
Nymph, Addo Elephant National Park


http://www.biodiversityexplorer.info/or ... legans.htm


ExFmem
Posts: 4554
Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2012 6:56 pm
Contact:

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by ExFmem »

Rain Locust Lamarckiana sparrmani or L. cucullata
Family Pamphagidae. Subfamily Porthetinae

Image
Male, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Genus Lamarckiana
According to Dirsh (1958) the main characters of the genus Lamarckiana are the 5-segmented flagellum of the antenna, not expanded margins of the hind femur with an excurved upper margin, and the pronotal carina excised at the basal transverse sulcus in males and crossed by it in females. Main differences from Lobosceliana are in the number of segments of the flagellum (4 in Lobosceliana), the upper margin of the hind femora (straight and expanded in Lobosceliana) and the presence of the transversal sulcus (absent in Lobosceliana). However, the number of segments in the flagellum revealed to be a fairly variable character in Lobosceliana (see also Hemp 2013).


Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1117239
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... 0/download

http://digital.csic.es/bitstream/10261/ ... 04-022.pdf


ExFmem
Posts: 4554
Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2012 6:56 pm
Contact:

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by ExFmem »

Tree Locust Anacridium moestum
Suborder Caelifera. Infraorder Acrididea. Superfamily Acridoidea. Family Acrididae. Subfamily Cyrtacanthacridinae. Tribe Cyrtacanthacridini.

Image © ExFmem
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Image © Tina
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, Grootkolk

Image © ExFmem
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1112477
https://digital.csic.es/bitstream/10261 ... 01-001.pdf


ExFmem
Posts: 4554
Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2012 6:56 pm
Contact:

Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Photo

Post by ExFmem »

Slender Digging Grasshopper, Slender Red-winged Grasshopper Acrotylus patruelis
Family: Acrididae. Subfamily: Oedipodinae. Tribe: Acrotylini

Image
KTP


Links:
https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/15431178/71713869
Last edited by ExFmem on Sat Apr 12, 2014 11:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.


Post Reply

Return to “Invertebrates”