AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts - Orthoptera

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

Post by Klipspringer »

Brown Cricket Acanthogryllus fortipes
Suborder Ensifera. Family Gryllidae. Subfamily Gryllinae. Tribe Gryllini

Image © BluTuna
Kruger National Park, Letaba (May 2014)

A large stocky dark brown Gryllid, 23 mm in length, with very robust hind femurs, tibiae armed with spines. Lighter areas on the pronotum.
The genus Acanthogryllus remains monotypic and may be best characterized as a Gryllus which has become a deep burrowing species.

Distribution
Acanthogryllus fortipes is widespread in South Africa and occurs north to Zimbabwe and Mozambique.
Acanthogryllus fortipes appears to be strictly associated with large expanses of lawn and is fairly common in many of the camps in the Kruger National Park and elswhere abundant in mowed lawns such as cricket grounds.

Biology
Nymphs and adults dig deep burrows where they hide during the day. At night they emerge to feed on grasses and other organic matter.
Adults of are especially common in the spring and early summer. The dry season is probably passed either in the late nymphal or adult stage and mating and egg-laying takes place shortly after the rains have begun.
Males sing from entrances of their burrows. The song consists of a succession of four to seven pulse chirps. Neighboring males chirp in alternation such that an individual calls during the silent period in a neighbour's song.

Identification
Large dark brown cricket with pale orange-brown band across vertex of head. Foretibiae with one long apical spur (longer than basal tarsomere). Head blackish from vertex onto forehead; face blackish on forehead, orange brown on mouthparts; cheeks orange.
Pronotum: dorsum pattemed with pale orange brown and dark brown. Lateral lobes black in upper half, pale in lower half.
Forewings brown, dorsum pale along medial vein, never extending to end of abdomen. Hindwings usually extending slightly beyond forewings, sometimes hidden, rarely extending beyond end of abdomen.
Legs pale brown to reddish brown, often spotted and streaked with darker brown. Foretibiae with large outer and much smaller inner tympanum. Basal tarsomere less than one third length of foretibia. Hind femur orange brown with dark brown oblique stripes on outer face. Hind tibiae dark brown with especially long and conspicuous subapical spurs.
Females: Forewings covering at least two thirds of abdomen. Ovipositor slightly shorter than hind femora: 7.5-12 mm.


Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1122560
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/ite ... 3/mode/1up
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4064821?ca ... VpcNW42oVW
https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/406482 ... b0abb8197e
https://journals.co.za/content/ento/3/1/AJA10213589_107


Klipspringer
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Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts

Post by Klipspringer »

Cryptic Grasshopper Morphacris fasciata
Family Acrididae. Subfamily Oedipodinae.

Image © BluTuna
Kruger National Park, Mopani (May 2014)

Identification
Size: males up to 21 mm, females up to 28 mm.
This species can be identified by the longitudinal parallel ridges on the pronotum with a shiny black spot and a smaller white spot on the lobe of the pronotum.
Body slender. Overall coloration brown, often mottled with small black spots.

Morphacris fasciata.jpg
Morphacris fasciata.jpg (52.51 KiB) Viewed 1203 times

Distribution
All of Africa, southeast Asia and S. Europe.

Habitat
A geophilous species, common in savanna, dry grassland and disturbed habitats.

Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1104657
https://www.contributions-to-entomology ... /1419/1418


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Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts

Post by Klipspringer »

Band-winged Grasshopper Trilophidia conturbata
Family Acrididae. Subfamily Oedipodinae. Tribe Trilophidiini

Image © BluTuna
Kruger National Park, Shingwedzi (May 2014)

Identification
Body length 12-17 mm in males; 15-20mm in females. Integumentum strongly rugose. Pronotum with projections and tubercles. Antennae longer than head and pronotum together.
Tegmen considerably exceeding tip of abdomen in males. Female are larger and more robust; tegmen exceeds tip of abdomen to lesser extent and often hardly at all.
General coloration varying from dark grey, through brown to almost reddish, with black spots. Antennae often annulated with light and dark bands of predominating colour. Tegmen with 2-3 dark fasciae. Inner side of hind femur black with one complete pale fascia apically. Abdomen ochraceous ventrally. Hind tibia black with two ochraceous bands, spines ochraceous with black tips.
This species is variable mainly in size, coloration, general rugosity and, in particular, the length of tegmina in relation to overall body length.

Distribution
Recorded for most African countries south of the Sahara and Arabia.

Habitat
A geophilous species.

Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1104514
https://archive.org/details/catalogueof ... 2/mode/2up
https://pdfslide.net/documents/a-revisi ... oidea.html


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Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts

Post by Klipspringer »

Pygmy Grasshopper Possibly Paratettix scaber
Infraorder Acrididea. Superfamily Tetrigoidea. Family Tetrigidae. Subfamily Tetriginae. Tribe Tetrigini

KNP.jpg
KNP.jpg (85.51 KiB) Viewed 1183 times
Kruger National Park © BluTuna

The members of this family are commonly known as Pygmy grasshoppers or Grouse locusts.
They are characterized by their small size, generally 6 to 14 mm. Their colouration corresponds with the soil the live on. Antennae are filiform. All species are characterized by an elongated pronotum that extends over the length of the abdomen and covers almost the totality of the hind wings as the fore wings are reduced to a small lateral scale sclerite.
Many species exibit polymorphism in the devlopment of the hind wings and pronotum.
The genera Tetrix, Paratettix and some related genera in the subfamly Terigoninae are generally difficult to tell apart.

Not many tetrigonid species are recorded from South Africa:
Ascetotettix capensis
Phloeonotus humilis
Dasyleurotettix infaustus
Trachytettix bufo
Paratettix marshallii
Paratettix scaber
Paratettix subpustulata
Tetrix dubiosus
Tettiella arcuata
Tettiella odiosa
Tettiellona hypsimelathrus



Distribution
P. scaber is recorded for many African countries south of the Sahara, in South Africa recorded from KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo and Mpumalanga)


Links:
Photo of P. scaber: https://inpn.mnhn.fr/espece/cd_nom/714945?lg=en
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1102464
https://www.contributions-to-entomology ... /1130/1129


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Re: AW Insect Book: Crickets, Grasshoppers & Locusts

Post by Klipspringer »

Gaudy Grasshopper Chrotogonus (Chrotogonus) hemipterus
Infraorder Acrididea. Superfamily Pyrgomorphoidea. Family Pyrgomorphidae. Subfamily Pyrgomorphinae. Tribe Chrotogonini

C. hemipterus.jpg
Chrotogonus hemipterus.jpg
Marloth park, Mpumalanga © Richprins

While the family Pyrgomorphidae is most well known for its colourful members, only about 10% of the 482 known species are brightly coloured and aposematic; the majority of pyrgomorphs are in fact cryptically coloured and probably not aposematic, such as the Chrotogonus members.
The pyrgomorphid grasshopper genus, Chrotogonus Serville, 1838, occurs over a large area of the Old World, including the greater part of Africa, except for most of the Sahara, the northwest and north. Although possessing all the essential characters of the acridoid family Pyrgomorphidae, it is somewhat atypical in its broad, squat, depressed body-form and short head. Chrotogonus is exceptionally variable even among Pyrgomorphidae and shows a bewildering morphological plasticity, even within individual species. This is particularly true of wing development, but also of many other characters.

C. hemipterus is widesprad in Africa and is common on dry open sandy soils.


Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1120499


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

Post by Klipspringer »

Green Tree Locust Cyrtacanthacris aeruginosa
Superfamily Acridoidea. Family Acrididae. Subfamily Cyrtacanthacridinae. Tribe Cyrtacanthacridini.

Image
C. a. aeruginosa

Image
Kruger National Park © nan


Description
Cyrtacanthacris aeruginosa is a large species (body length 55mm) with a stocky appearance.
Body colour is predominantly green with a thin white line along the forewings, the hind wings are pale yellow. The hind tibiae are bright red
with dark tipped white to yellow spines. Eyes are striped and the antennae pale.
Nymphs are bright green.

Distribution
It occurs throughout Southern and Central Africa.

Habitat
Arboreal, in shrubby vegetation, forest edges or grassland.

Biology
It is regarded as a univoltine species (completing one generation per year). This species has an egg diapause period over winter. The adults mate and then the females lay their eggs and die before the onset of the dry season in April or May. The eggs then lay dormant in the soil for up to 7 months until rains begin towards October.


Links:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Commo ... ID=1112300
http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/86285


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