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| Entomology:  ORTHOPTERA
  & BLATTARIA 1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Orders: Orthoptera
  & Blattaria (Contact)    
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  subject matter:   
       [Section includes new order Blattaria]             The order Orthoptera
  -- <Adults> & <Juveniles>  --, meaning "straight-winged, are large insects
  and among the most injurious of all insects. 
  They have biting mouthparts, and their hind legs have enlarged femora
  for jumping.  The fore wings are
  straight and leathery and are modified as tegmina, which overlap each other,
  while the hind wings are fanlike.  The
  cerci are unjointed and the pronotum has enlarged lobes that hide the pleural
  wall.  The ovipositor is well
  developed, and there are specialized stridulatory organs.               This
  order includes grasshoppers, locusts and crickets. Among the grasshoppers are
  the katydid
  or long-horned grasshopper
  Tettigoniidae= <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- with large
  sword-like ovipositors consisting of three pairs of valves borne on the 8th
  and 9th abdominal segments.  By means
  of these the eggs, not enclosed in an ootheca, can be deposited in plant
  tissues, on which these insects regularly feed. The antennae also are long,
  often extending backwards beyond the apex of the abdomen. Stridulation is
  brought about by rubbing a toothed ridge on the left tegmen against an
  analogous region of its right counterpart. This latter has a smooth tense
  membrane and acts as a resonator when the tegmina are in motion and the
  noise, produced mostly at night, can be very loud.  Auditory organs of some complexity are situated in each fore
  tibia.  The Mormon cricket, Anabrus simplex Haldeman, can be a serious pest of agricultural crops
  in the Intermountain area of western North America.  A miracle of sorts occurred in Utah where a serious outbreak of
  these crickets was destroying agricultural crops, but which was significantly
  reduced by seagulls (Larus californicus)
  (Borror, D. J. et al. 1981).  
             The long established family name Gryllidae -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- has been used for the true crickets, but current changes in classification does
  not distinguish them as a clear taxonomic group (see Orthoptera
  Classification).  They more closely
  resemble the long-homed grasshoppers in their antennae, ovipositor and
  stridulatory apparatus, and appear to be directly related to them. Gryllus
  domesticus, the house-cricket, competes with the
  cockroaches for a place in domestic dwellings and leads there a similar life.
  Gryllotaipa
  gryllotaipa, the mole cricket, is subterranean in
  habit.  It is possible to estimate ambient
  temperature from the rate of their crick crick chirps. [Also
  see:  Gryllacrididae
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  --].               Members of the Acrididae are noteworthy
  for their gregarious and migratory instincts. A species, such as Locusta
  migratoria, generally leading a relatively harmless existence as a
  solitary grasshopper, may under certain conditions develop in inestimable
  numbers which, after traveling long distances, invade cultivated districts
  causing enormous harm. Thus in the case of Locusta migratoria, when
  environmental conditions favor an increase in numbers, there is an usual
  trend towards the production of swarming migrants, i.e. the gregarious phase.
  The subsequent decline in numbers leads to the production of solitary
  nonmigrants, i.e. the solitary phase. The two phases differ morphologically,
  biologically and in distribution so markedly as to have been regarded as
  distinct species. Between them are short-lived individuals that form a series
  with no set characters, merging barely the gregarious phase at one end and
  into the solitary phase at the other. 
  The Rocky Mountain
  grasshopper of North America, Melanoplus
  mexicanus, once had a migratory phase, which has since
  disappeared.   NEW
  ORDER:  Blattaria   (Previously = Superfamily Blattoidea)             These are the cockroaches, sometimes called "water bugs",
  that have generalized biting mouthparts and a five-jointed
  tarsus.  They are considered as
  probably the oldest group of present day insects.  The anterior wings are narrower and stouter than the posterior
  ones, which are more membranous and fold like a fan. Jointed cerci &
  styles occur in adult males only.  The
  ovipositor is small or absent.  The
  metamorphosis is hemimetabolous.  Eggs
  are laid in beanlike capsules or oothecae that are produced by secretions of
  female accessory glands.  The female
  may deposit these all at one time, or they may be carried around until they
  hatch.   Blatella germanica 
 
 
 
            
  Cockroaches are nocturnal in their habits and omnivorous.  They are also gregarious.   
                 The
  Phasmatodea are the stick insects,
  which resemble twigs or leaves of plants. They are vegetarian and their body
  is very slender and long.  They do not
  have their hind femora enlarged and they do not jump.  The tarsi are commonly 5-segmented.  The body is elongated and sticklike and
  the wings are either reduced or entirely absent.  Their eggs are laid singly and there is no ootheca.  Some tropical species are called "leaf insects"
  because they are flattened and expanded laterally and usually have their hind
  wings well developed.  They do not
  possess tympana and stridulatory organs, the cerci are short and have only
  one segment, and the ovipositor is short and hidden.             The walking sticks
  of North America are slow moving herbivorous insects that occur on trees and
  shrubbery.  They can emit a strong
  odor from glands on their thorax, which is a means of defense.  They are also able to regenerate lost legs
  to a great extent.  At times their
  populations can become epizootic on trees, which causes considerable damage.             There is usually
  only a single generation per year with an overwintering egg stage.  Eggs may remain dormant into a second year
  and frequently populations are only abundant on alternate years.                During the 20th Century the
  Chlorinated Hydrocarbons were widely used to control grasshoppers in North
  America and Africa, where great damage was inflicted on agricultural crops.  The Desert Locust, Schistocerca gregaria, of
  Africa has been considered the most destructive insect in the world.  It is responsible for periodic
  famine.  It migrates from central
  Africa to more northern regions where the damage caused is severe.  With the ban of these insecticides in
  North America cultural means of control were substituted, which requires
  plowing the fields before springtime.             Cockroaches may be controlled with
  poisoned baits, but sanitation is the most effective way to reduce their invasion
  into home areas.  However, neighboring
  dwellings that harbor large populations of roaches may pose a threat because
  they are able to travel through the sewer systems.   -------------------------------   Orthoptera
  --Biological Control Projects (1% of total projects)             Cockroaches, Blatella, Blatta, Periplaneta, & Supella <ch-27.htm>     
   ==============     Borror, D. J., D. M. DeLong & C. A. Triplehorn.  1981. 
  An Introduction To The Study of Insects, 5th ed.  Saunders Publ.,       NY. 
  827 p.   |