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Tettigoniidae Fossil range: Carboniferous - Recent |
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| Great
green bush-cricket (Tettigonia viridissima) |
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| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Orthoptera |
| Suborder: | Ensifera |
| Superfamily: | Tettigonioidea |
| Family: | Tettigoniidae Krauss, 1902 |
| Subfamilies | |
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The family Tettigoniidae, known in American English as katydids and in British English as bush-crickets, contains more than 6,400 species. It is part of the suborder Ensifera and the only family in the superfamily Tettigonioidea. They are also known as long-horned grasshoppers, although they are more closely related to crickets than to grasshoppers. Many tettigoniids exhibit mimicry and camouflage, commonly with shapes and colors similar to leaves.
Tettigoniids may be distinguished from grasshoppers by the length of their filamentous antennae, which may exceed their own body length, while grasshoppers' antennae are always relatively short and thickened.
The males of tettigoniids have sound-producing organs (via stridulation) located on the hind angles of their front wings. In some species females are also capable of stridulation.
There are about 255 species in North America, but the majority of species live in the tropical regions of the world.
The diet of tettigoniids includes leaves, flowers, bark, and seeds, but many species are exclusively predatory, feeding on other insects, snails or even small vertebrates such as snakes and lizards. Some are also considered pests by commercial crop growers and are sprayed to limit growth. Large tettigoniids can inflict a painful bite or pinch if handled but seldom break the skin.
The males provide a nuptial gift for the females in the form of a spermatophylax, a body attached to the males' spermatophore which is consumed by the female. The function of the spermatophylax is to increase the attachment time of the males' spermatophore and thereby increase his paternity. [1]
The eggs of tettigoniids are typically oval shaped and laid in rows on the host plant.
Some species of bush crickets are consumed by people, like the nsenene (Ruspolia baileyi) in Uganda and neighbouring areas.
![]() Tettigoniid on a rock |
![]() European speckled bush-cricket |
![]() Phricta aberrans, Australia |
![]() Erythrism in a katydid in New York |
![]() Macroxiphus nymph. |
![]() A green bush cricket sitting on a leaf |
![]() Note the long antennae |
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![]() Angle-wing Katydid (Microcentrum) in North Texas |
![]() Katydid in the night near Torino, Italy |
![]() Dark Bush Cricket (nymph) Northamptonshire, England |
![]() Conocephalus nigropleurum |
![]() Juvenile male Caedicia simplex. Auckland, New Zealand. Also found in Australia. |
![]() Bush cricket in a green house |
![]() Katydid nymph in Pasadena |
![]() Peruvian Leaf Katydid |
![]() Erythrism in a katydid in Florida |
![]() Erythrism in a katydid in Ontario |
KATYDID, the name given to certain North American insects, belonging to the family Locustidae, and related to the green or tree grasshoppers of England. As in other members of the family, the chirrup, alleged to resemble the words "Katydid," is produced by the friction of a file on the underside of the left forewing over a ridge on the upperside of the right. Several species, belonging mostly to the genera Microcentonus and Cyrto phallus, are known.
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Categories: KAS-KEN
| Tettigoniidae Fossil range: Carboniferous - Recent | |||||||||||||||
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| File:Tettigonia virdissima nymph on Phleum | |||||||||||||||
| Great green bush-cricket (Tettigonia viridissima) | |||||||||||||||
| Scientific classification | |||||||||||||||
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The Katidids are a family of insects, which often use mimicry. In British English they are known as Bush-crickets. They are als known as long-horned grasshoppers, but they are more closely related to the cricket than the grasshopper. There are over 6.400 species.
Katydids may disguise themselves brilliantly. Some look excactly like dead brown leaves, complete with holes, lying still on the forest floor of the rainforests of Asia and South America. Others act like green, living leaves fluttering from a branch. They even have vein-like markings like real leaves.[1]
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