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Phasmatodea

Stick insects; Leaf insects; Walking stick insects; Walking sticks; Mantophasmatodea

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Aretaon asperrimus
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Aretaon asperrimus
Baculum-ssp
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Baculum-ssp
Kinds

Identification
  1. Antennae long, slender
  2. Mouthparts mandibulate, prognathous
  3. Body long, cylindrical
  4. Prothorax shorter than meso- or metathorax
  5. Leg segments long and slender
  6. Tarsi 5-segmented
  7. Wings often reduced or absent
  8. Cerci short, unsegmented

Geographic distribution
Common in tropical and subtropical climates where they are found living on their host plants.
North America
Worldwide
Number of Families 2 3
Number of Species 32 >2500

Natural history
The leaf and stick insects are sometimes grouped as a family or suborder of Orthoptera. All species are herbivores. As the name "walkingstick" implies, most phasmids are slender, cylindrical, and cryptically colored to resemble the twigs and branches on which they live. Members of the family Timemidae (=Phyllidae) bear a strong resemblance to leaves: abdomens are broad and flat, legs have large lateral extensions, and coloration is primarily brown, green, or yellow. Most walkingsticks are slow-moving insects, a behavior pattern that is consistent with their cryptic lifestyle. In a few tropical species, the adults have well-developed wings, but most phasmids are brachypterous (reduced wings) or secondarily wingless. Stick insects are most abundant in the tropics where some species may be up to 30 cm (12 inches) in length. Females do not have a well-developed ovipositor so they cannot insert their eggs into host plant tissue like most other Orthoptera. Instead, the eggs are dropped singly onto the ground, sometimes from great heights.

A Few Facts:

  • Phasmid eggs often resemble seeds. The eggs may remain dormant for over a year before hatching.
  • In some parts of the tropics, stick insects may be so abundant that eggs falling out of the trees may sound like rain on a tin roof.
  • Some walkingsticks are sold as pets. They are easy to rear if kept in a warm environment with fresh foliage from their host plant.
  • Glands located on the thorax of many species can produce a foul-smelling liquid that repels predators.
  • When attacked by a predator, the legs of some phasmids may separate from the body (autotomy). Some species can even regenerate lost legs. These are the only insects able to regenerate body parts.
  • Several species produce offspring from unfertilized eggs (parthenogenesis). Males may be uncommon or unknown.
  • Some phasmids change color with changes in temperature, humidity, or light intensity. Pigment granules in the epidermis disperse at night or on cool days, darkening the cuticle and absorbing more heat.

Acknowledgements
This page was constructed from Casandra Lloyd's (Ecology Major, UGA) original Phasmatodea page.


Following modified from University of Guelph
   
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Order - PHASMATODEA
(Greek, phasma = apparition, phantom)
Common Names: stick insects, leaf insects, walking stick insects
Distribution: Warmer parts of world, especially the tropics

Description
Although diverse in the tropics, the Phasmatodea is a small group in North America. The only northeastern species is illustrated here.

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Following modified from Lucid via Discover Life
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A stick insect camouflaged among grass
A giant stick insect
A stick insect

Order - PHASMATODEA
(Greek, phasma = apparition, phantom)
Common Names: stick insects, leaf insects, walking stick insects
Distribution: Warmer parts of world, especially the tropics

Description
All phasmids consume plant material (phytophagous) and are remarkable for their ability to mimic twigs, stems, leaves and sticks. Their bodies are as varied as the vegetation they inhabit. Dry grass stems are inhabited by species that are brown with cylindrical bodies and long tubular legs. Foliage species may have bodies that are flattened and leaf-like with legs that bear equal resemblance to foliage. Wings may be present or absent. If wings are present, then the forewings are leathery and form protective covers (tegmina), the rear pair are used for flight. In winged species, only the males are capable of flight. Compound eyes are present and simple eyes (ocelli) are only present in winged species. Mandibles are well developed. The antennae are composed of short, straight segments (filiform).

Phasmids actively feed during the night hours and generally remain motionless during the day.

Nymph
There is no metamorphic cycle of egg, larva, pupa and adult. The juveniles emerge from the eggs as miniature, wingless versions of the adults (nymphs) and mature by successive moults. Nymphal stages can be differentiated from adults by their smaller size, fewer antennal segments and in winged species, a lack of wings. Mimicry also extends to the eggs. Many species lay eggs that resemble plant seeds.


Members
Phasmids, leaf insects, stick insects, walking stick insects.


Food
Stick insects feed on fresh vegetation, usually the foliage of the plant on which the insect is found.


Importance
Apart from their use by other organisms as food, phasmids are generally not of any great significance in ecosystems. When present in enormous numbers (which does occur in eucalypt forests at intervals) damage may be significant. When plague proportions of stick insects are reached, whole tracts of forest can be defoliated and seriously damaged. In some parts of eastern Australia, local names such as "Ringbarkers" have been applied to stick insect depredations due to the dying brown appearance of the forest after the swarms have passed through.

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Updated: 2009-11-21 00:51:41 gmt
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