Now that we've covered that, let's get on with the phylogeny.
Eukaryota
Animalia
Eumetazoa
Bilateralia
Nephrozoa
Prokaryota
Ecdysozoa
Arthropoda
Hexapoda
Insecta
Dicondylia
Pterygota
Manopterygota
Neoptera
Polyneoptera
Anartioptera
Polyorthoptera
Orthopterida
Panorthoptera
Orthoptera
Caelifera
Acrididea
Acridoidea
Acrididae
Eyprocneminae
Cyathosternum prehensile
Bolívar,1882
You may have noticed my lack of input on the taxonomy. That can be taken as an indication that I want to keep you guessing on what we have here. As the 'Insecta' makes it pretty obvious, it shouldn't take long...
No idea?
No idea?
It's a grasshopper or locust (the order, Orthoptera, also includes crickets, and the suborder Caelifera also includes the pygmy mole crickets - at the infraorder Acrididea it could still have been a grouse locust. Only at the superfamily Acridoidea did it become definitely a grasshopper of some description). With no common name to dawdle on, let's meet our guest for the post:
A grassland species which flares a rich red wing as it flies, it is easily overlooked among other red-winged locusts and grasshoppers in the Central-African scrub-grassland it calls home. Its purplish-black eyeliner and (shown better in the picture below) hind feet, seem to distinguish it from the variety of similar species with which it shares its range.
(Identity based on comparison of ranges and specimens pictured on the Orthoptera Species File, here)
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