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| Arthropoda
  - Insecta ORTHOPTERA & BLATTARIA   (Grasshoppers
  & Waterbugs (Contact)     [Also See:  Blattaria Key] GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS   Order Orthoptera              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
  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> --].       
 
 
          The mid gut
  is the site of the formation of a full complement of enzymes suitable to the
  mixed diet on which the animals feed. Examples are the cockroaches Periplaneta americana
  and P. australasiae and
  the less common German cockroach, Blattella germanica
  and Oriental roach, Blatta orientalis.          Further
  detail on Blattaria may be
  found at <Blattariamed.htm>   CONTROL          During the
  20th Century the Chlorinated Hydrocarbons were widely used to control
  grasshoppers in North America and Africa, where they periodically cause great
  damage to agricultural crops.  But
  today the these compounds have been banned because of their carcinogentic
  properties.  The Desert Locust, Schistocerca gregaria,
  of Africa has been considered as the most destructive insect in the world.  It has been responsible for periodic
  famine.  It migrates from central
  Africa to more northern regions where the damage cause 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. | 
 
| Key References:     <medvet.ref.htm>    <Hexapoda>    [Additional references may be found at: MELVYL Library]   Appel, A. G. &
  L. M. Smith.  2003.  biology and management of the smokey-brown
  cockroach.  Ann. Vev. Entomol. 47:  33-55. Bell,
  William J. & K. G. Adiyodi. 
  1981.  American Cockroach.  Springer
  Verl.. p. 4. Bell,
  William J.; Roth, Louis M.; Nalepa, Christine A.  2007.  Cockroaches:
  Ecology, Behavior & Natural History. 
  JHU Press. pp. 55–58. Bernton,
  H.S. & H. Brown.  1964.  "Insect Allergy Preliminary Studies
  of the Cockroach". J. Allergy. 35
  (506–513): 506–13. Bhattacharya, S.  2003. Plague of locusts causes mass
  allergy attack. New Scientist Mag. Blattoidea
  (Cockroaches & Termites).  2015.  CSIRO Entomology. Borror, D. J., D. M. DeLong & C. A. Triplehorn.  1981. 
  An Introduction To The Study of Insects, 5th ed.  Saunders Publ., NY.  827 p. Brenner,
  R.J., P. Koehler, & R. S. Patterson. 
  1987. 
  "Health Implications of Cockroach Infestations".
  Infestations in Med. 4 (8): 349–355. Burgess,
  N. R. H. & K. N. Chetwyn.  1981.  Association of cockroaches with an
  outbreak of dysentery.  Trans. Roy.
  Soc. Trop. Med. & Hyg. 75-332-3. Cleveland, L.R., S. K. Hall, E. P.
  Sanders, & J. Collier.  1934.  "The Wood-Feeding Roach Cryptocercus, IN:
  Protozoa, and the Symbiosis between      Protozoa & Roach". Mem. Amer. Acad. Arts & Sci.
  17 (2): 185–382. Cram, E. B. 1937. A species of Orthoptera serving as
  intermediate host of Tetrameres americana of poultry in Puerto Rico.
  Proceedings of the       Ornithological Society of Washington 4:
  24.  Elgerdi, R. M., K. S. Ghenghesh &
  N. Berbrash.  2006.  Carriage by the German cockroach (Blatella germanica) of multiple
  antibiotic-resistant       bacteria that are potentially
  pathogenic to humans, in hospitals & households in Tripoli, Libya.  Ann. trop Med. & Parasitol. 100:  55-62. Fink, A., A. Permin, K-M. V. Jensen, J. Bresciani,
  and H. B. Magwisha. 2005. An experimental infection model for Tetrameres americana (Cram).      
  Parasitology Research 95: 179-185.       Biochemisty Physiology. 26: 1041-1049. Gordh,
  G. & D. H. Headrick.  2009.  A Dictionary of Entomology (2nd ed.).
  Wallingford: CABI. p. 200. Gore,
  J. C. & C. Schal.  2007.  Cockroach allergen biology and mitigation
  in the indoor environment.  Ann. Rev.
  Entomol. 52:  439-63. Kang, B., D. Vellody, H. Homburger,
  & J. W. Yunginger.  1979.
  "Cockroach cause of allergic asthma. Its specificity and immunologic
  profile". J. of       Allergy & Clinical Immunology. 63
  (2): 80–86. Laing,  F. 
  1938.  The cockroach.  Bull. Mus. Nat. Hist. Econ. Ser. 12. Legner, E.
  F. 
  1995.  Biological
  control of Diptera of medical and veterinary importance.  J. Vector Ecology 20(1): 59-120 Liboreau, M. J. T. Costa & C.
  Rivaul.  2012.  The social biology of domiciliary
  cockroaches:  colony structure,
  etc.  Insectes Sociaux 59(4):  445-52.  Nunamaker, R. A., J. A.
  Lockwood, C. E. Stith, C. L. Cambell, S. P. Schell, B. S. Drolet, W. C.
  Wilson, D. M. White. and G. J. Letchworth. 2003. O'Neill, K. M. 1985. Livestock Dung as a food
  resource & thermal refuge for rangeland grasshoppers (Orthoptera:
  Acrididae). Pan-Pacific       Entomologist  70: 222-229. McKittrick,
  F.A.  1965.  A contribution to the understanding of cockroach-termite
  affinities . Ann Ent. Soc. Amer. 58
  (1): 18–22. Pai, H. H., W. C. Chen & C. F.
  Peng.  2005.  Isolation of bacteria with antibiotic resistance from household
  cockroaches (Periplaneta americana and       Blatella germanica).  Acta Tropica 93: 
  259-65. Petersen, R. K. D. & B. A.
  Shurdut.  1999.  Human health risk from cockroaches and
  cockroach management:  a risk analysis
  approach.  Amer.       Entomol.  45:  142-8. Rentz,
  David.  2014.  A Guide to the Cockroaches of
  Australia.  CSIRO Publishing Corp. Richman,
  Dina L.  2014.  Asian cockroach.  Featured Creatures. University of Florida.  Roth,
  L. M. & E. R. Willis.  1960.  The biotic associations of
  cockroaches.  Smithsonian Misc. Coll.
  141:  1-470. Rust,
  M. K., D. A. Reierson & K. H. Hangsen. 
  1991.  Control of American cockoraches
  (Dictyoptera: Blattidae) in sewers.  J.
  Med. Entomol. 28:  210-13. Rust,
  M. K.  2007.  Cockroaches.  Univ.
  Calif. Integ. Pest Manag. Prog. Rust,
  M. K. , J. M. Owens & D. A. Relerson, ed.  1995.  Understanding and
  Controlling the German Cockroach. 
  Oxford Univ. Press, NY. Schal,
  C; Hamilton, R. L.  1990.  Integrated suppression of synanthropic
  cockroaches.  Annu. Rev. Entomol. 35:
  521–551. Service, M.  2008. 
  Medical Entomology For Students. 
  Cambridge Univ. Press.  289 p Stelmach, U., J. Jerzynska, W.
  Stelmach, et al.  2002.  Cockroach allergy and exposure to
  cockroach allegen in Polish children with asthma.        Allergy 57:  701-5. Styne, D. G. 1962.
  Grasshopper (Phymateus leprosus Fabr.) poisoning in a Bantu child. South
  African Medical Journal 36: 822-823. Tanaka, K. & S. Tanaka.  1997. 
  Winter Survival & Freeze Tolearnce in a Northern Cockroach, Periplaneta japonica
  (Blattidae: Dictyoptera).  Zool.
  Sci.      
  14 (5) 849–853.Valles, S. M.; Koehler, P. G.; Brenner, R. J.  1999.  Comparative insecticide susceptibility
  & detoxification enzyme activities among       pestiferous blattoidea.  Comp.Infibous Biochem Physiol.  Pharmacol Toxicol Endocrinol. 124 (3): 227–232 Whitman, D. W., C. G. Jones, and M. S. Blum. 1992.
  Defensive secretion production in lubber grasshoppers (Orthoptera:
  Romaleidae): Influence of age,      sex, diet, and discharge frequency. Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer 85: 96-102.  Whitman, D.W. and M. L.
  Richardson 2010. Necrophagy in grasshoppers: Taeniopoda
  eques feeds on mammal carrion. J. Orthoptera Res. 19: 377-380.  Whitman, D. W. and L. J. Orsack 1985. Biology of
  Taeniopoda eques (Orthoptera: Acrididae) in Southeastern Arizona. Ann Ent. Soc. Amer. 78: 811-825     |