Natural history
- Related Topics:
- ice bug
- Dictyoptera
- Orthoptera
- phasmid
- Exopterygota
Life cycle
General features
Since orthopterans undergo simple metamorphosis and have externally developing wings, they are known as hemimetabolous insects. The grylloblattids are wingless, and all large orthopteran groups contain a few wingless species, even though the basic structure of the orthopteran thorax proves their relationship to winged insects. A typical orthopteran life cycle has three stages: egg, nymph, and adult. Usually eggs are deposited outside the body on the ground or on vegetation; however, in some cases (e.g., viviparous cockroaches), eggs are incubated in a brood chamber within the body of the female, and nymphs are born alive. Nymphs resemble adults except for their smaller size and lack of development of reproductive organs and wings; there is no pupa, or resting stage. In most orthopteran groups, the hatching insect that wriggles from the egg is not a fully formed nymph with freely moving legs; actually it is little more than an active embryo and is still enclosed in a thin membrane. This stage is called a vermiform larva; shedding of the enclosing membrane occurs at the intermediate molt. The shapeless skins shed by young grasshoppers crawling from egg pods or by mantids leaving an egg case are examples of such exuviae (cast skins).
The number of nymphal stages between the intermediate molt and adulthood varies from about 4 to 13. Generalizations are approximately as follows: cockroaches, 5–13; mantids, 4–9; grylloblattids, about 8; crickets and katydids, 5–9; walking sticks, 4–6; and grasshoppers, 4–9, most often 5–7.
Egg laying
Egg-laying habits are distinctive in many orthopteran species. Among cockroaches, only one family (Blaberidae) is viviparous; the other four families contain species that have well formed egg cases (oothecae). Among these families, some species carry the oothecae protruding from the body until hatching time is near; others, however, deposit their egg cases within several days of formation. Usually oothecae contain from a few to more than 30 eggs arranged in two rows. Along one edge of the ootheca is a seam that bears a keel, or ridge; the shape of the ridge varies in species that carry the ootheca externally. Minute openings from the base of the keel to the interior of the ootheca are known to be a ventilating device in some species. The ootheca is first carried in the body with the keel uppermost; in certain groups, however, it is rotated prior to deposition so that the keel is on one side. Details concerning positioning of the ootheca and other aspects of egg laying were not correlated with behaviour patterns or group affinities until a basis for understanding their significance was established.
Mantids lay eggs in clusters of less than 10 to more than 300. Usually they are laid in regular layers surrounded by a viscous quick-drying liquid that provides a light but tough protective covering. The egg masses of most mantids have a distinctive shape and size. Although most mantid species attach oothecae to vegetation, these egg cases may be attached to rocks in some environments or placed in grooves in the sand and covered over in the desert.
Grylloblattid eggs are laid in damp moss, decaying logs, or in pockets between broken rocks and wet soil. The eggs, about three millimetres long and usually black in colour, are laid loosely or inserted into the hatching site with the ovipositor.
Of the walking stick species studied, most have eggs that look like small seeds and are dropped loosely on the ground. At least one species, however, attaches its eggs to foliage, and a large, heavily bodied species of the southeastern U.S. (Anisomorpha buprestoides) scratches a depression in sandy soil with its front and middle legs, deposits eggs in it, and covers them with sand.
Crickets and katydids utilize their ovipositors to insert eggs into soil or plant material. The eggs of tree crickets (Oecanthus), for example, are inserted in rows in the canes of blackberries and various other stems; the eggs of field crickets (Gryllus) are laid in soil; the flattened eggs of certain katydids (Scudderia) are forced between the upper and lower epidermis layers at the margin of tree leaves; and the eggs of other katydids (Microcentrum) are laid in overlapping rows lengthwise on twigs of trees.
Most grasshoppers lay their eggs in soil; a few drill holes in dead wood or place their eggs at the bases of grass clumps or on the surfaces of leaves. Before laying the eggs, the female manipulates the valves of her ovipositor to make a hole in suitable soil (the type varies with the species). During the digging process, the abdomen is greatly extended, and the female manipulates the ovipositor valves to open and close and rotate on the long axis. Then she deposits several dozen eggs in the hole. The eggs are surrounded by a mucilaginous mass (the egg pod) that dries in a cylindrical shape. The number of egg pods laid by one female and the number of eggs in each pod vary according to the species and local conditions. The egg pods are laid over an interval of several weeks.
A few orthopteran species have females only; therefore, reproduction occurs without fertilization (parthenogenesis). Only rarely are species that normally reproduce bisexually parthenogenetic; and when parthenogenesis does occur in bisexual species, it is usually only partially successful because the few nymphs that do hatch often are deformed and fail to reach maturity. In the laboratory, however, there have been a few cases in which several generations have been produced parthenogenetically, proving that there is an inherent capability in these bisexual groups for reproduction without males.