Caelifera
Caelifera
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Immature grasshopper
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Caelifera is a suborder of the order Orthoptera, comprising "short-horned" orthopterans with the common names of grasshoppers and locusts, characterized in extant members by saltorial hind limbs (modified for leaping), antennae having less than 30 segments, and the absence of auditory organs on the prothorax. Although members of Caelifera are sometimes collectively known as grasshoppers, often this designation is limited to the "true grasshoppers" of the caeliferan family Acrididae and the term short-horned grasshoppers is used for members of the suborder to distinguish them from the "long-horned grasshoppers" of the orthopteran suborder Ensifera. The term locusts is not a taxonomic grouping but rather is applied to caeliferan species that exhibit a behavioral, morphological, and physiological shift from a solitary phase to a gregarious migratory phase.
In many places around the world, grasshoppers are eaten as a good source of protein. In Mexico for example chapulines are used as a snack or filling. It is found on skewers in Chinese food markets, like the Donghuamen Night Market [1]
Raw grasshoppers should be eaten with caution, as they can contain tapeworms.[2]
Overview and description
As members of the insect order Orthoptera, caeliferans are characterized by chewing/biting mouthparts, incomplete metamorphosis (hemimetabolism), strong hind limbs, and two pairs of wings that are held overlapping the abdomen at rest. The forewings are narrower than the hindwings and hardened at the base, while the hindwings are membranous and folded fan-like under the forewings when at rest.
Orthoptera includes two suborders, Caelifera (short-horned grasshoppers and locusts) and Ensifera (crickets, katydids, and weta). The Ensifera, sometimes collectively known as "long-horned grasshoppers" (Naskrecki 2004), are typified by antennae with many more than 30 segments and longer than the body, while the Caelifera have antennae shorter than the body. In evolutionary terms, the split between the Caelifera and the Ensifera is no more recent than the Permo-Triassic boundary (Zeuner 1939).
Characteristics of Caelifera include having a short ovipositor in females that has four functional valves (versus the typically six-valved, sword-shaped ovipositor of female ensiferans); antennae with less than 30 segments; and if a hearing organ is present, such as a tympanum, it is found on the abdomen, on the sides of the first abdominal segment. Generally they are winged, but hind wings are membranous while front wings (tegmina) are coriaceous and not fit for flight. Females are normally larger than males. Males have a single unpaired plate at the end of the abdomen. Females have two pairs of valves ( triangles) at the end of the abdomen used to dig in sand when egg laying.
Those species that make easily heard noises usually do so by rubbing the hind femurs against the forewings or abdomen (stridulation), or by snapping the wings in flight. This is different from the ensiferans who rub their tegmina against each other, with one tegmen (front wing) being a modified vein (the file) that is equipped with a file-like row of teeth, and this is rubbed against a modified vein, making a hardened edge, of the second tegmen (the scraper).
The presence of the protein resilin in the back legs of grasshoppers is one reason that some can make repeated leaps of long distance, perhaps 8.5 feet (2.6 meters), without any sign of fatigue. Resilin has remarkable elastic properties, with 97 percent efficiency in returning stored energy, and allows a release of energy beyond that of muscle power alone (Naskrecki 2004).
Habitat, behavior, and reproduction
The Caelifera are predominantly tropical but most of the superfamilies are represented world wide.
Classification
Recent estimates (Kevan 1982; Günther, 1980, 1992; Otte 1994-1995; subsequent literature) indicate some 2,400 valid Caeliferan genera and about 11,000 valid species described to date. Many undescribed species exist, especially in tropical wet forests.
Locusts
See also locust.
Locusts are several species of short-horned grasshoppers of the family Acrididae that sometimes form very large groups (swarms); these can be highly destructive and migrate in a more or less coordinated way. Thus, these grasshoppers have solitary and gregarious (swarm) phases. Locust swarms can cause massive damage to crops. Important locust species include Schistocerca gregaria and Locusta migratoria in Africa and the Middle East, and Schistocerca piceifrons in tropical Mexico and Central America (Mesoamerica). Other grasshoppers important as pests (which, unlike true locusts, do not change colour when they form swarms) include Melanoplus species (like M. bivittatus, M. femurrubrum and M. differentialis) and Camnula pellucida in North America; the lubber grasshopper Brachystola magna, and Sphenarium purpurascens in Northern and Central Mexico; species of Rhammatocerus in South America; and the Senegalese grasshopper Oedaleus senegalensis and the variegated grasshopper Zonocerus variegatus in Africa.
In popular culture
- In ancient Greek Mythology, Tithonus, prince of Troy; son of Laomedon was loved by the dawn goddess Eos, who bore him Memnon and Emathion. When Eos begged Zeus to bestow immortality upon Tithonus, she forgot to ask the god to grant her lover eternal youth; so Tithonus grew older and older until Eos, out of pity, changed him into a grasshopper.
- Aesop (620–560 B.C.E.), a slave and story-teller who lived in Ancient Greece told a tale called The Ant and the Grasshopper. In this tale, the ant worked hard preparing his shelter and stores of food all summer, while the grasshopper played. Once the winter came, the ant was prepared and the grasshopper, having no shelter or food begs to enter the ant's house. The ant refuses and the grasshopper starves to death.
- The 1957 film Beginning of the End featured mutated giant grasshoppers attacking Chicago.
- "Grasshopper" is a term currently used in jest referencing an inexperienced person who has much to learn. Its use originating from the television show Kung Fu (1972-1975) in which the student, Young Caine, portrayed by Radames Pera is taking instruction from his Master Po portrayed by Keye Luke who nicknamed his student "Grasshopper" as a term of endearment.
- In the 1998 movie A Bug's Life, in an apparent homage to the Aesop fable, The Ant and the Grasshopper, where the heroes are the members of an ant colony, and the lead villain and his henchmen are grasshoppers, the lead villain is then eaten by a bird.
- The Japanese superhero franchise "Kamen Rider" originally had a grasshopper motif, with a grasshopper based helmet and costume. This was later toned down in favour of other motifs in more recent Kamen Rider series, though some features of the original hero remain ('bug eyes').
- In the Sci-Fi Series Farscape Criton always referred to Scorpios as Grasshopper.
Media
- Tettigoniid Camouflage Aug2008.jpg
Camouflage
- Grasshopper front-side view.JPG
Grasshopper front side view
See also
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- Firefly Encyclopedia of Insects and Spiders, edited by Christopher O'Toole, ISBN 1-55297-612-2, 2002
- Gwynne, D. T. and L. DeSutter. 1996. Ensifera. Crickets, katydids and weta. Tree of Life Web Project Version 01 January 1996. Retrieved November 10, 2008.
- Gwynne, D. T., L. DeSutter, P. Flook, and H. Rowell. 1996. Orthoptera. Crickets, kaytdids, grasshoppers, etc.. Tree of Life Web Project Version 01 January 1996. Retrieved November 10, 2008.
- Naskrecki, P. 2004. Orthoptera. In B. Grzimek, D. G. Kleiman, V. Geist, and M. C. McDade, Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Detroit: Thomson-Gale. ISBN 0787657883.
- Rowell, H., and P. Flook. 2001. Caelifera. Shorthorned Grasshoppers, Locusts and Relatives. Tree of Life Web Project version March 23, 2001. Retrieved November 15, 2008.
External links
- Tree of Life Web Project
- The Grasshopper suicide
- American grasshopper on the UF / IFAS Featured Creatures Web site
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