Female, sitting on my index finger, Chongwe, Lusaka, Zambia, October 2011. Taken using an Olympus E-420, Zuiko 40-150mm lens and two (possibly three) KOOD magnifiers. |
- Porthetinae
- Pamphagidae
- Acridoidea
See also Cyathosternum prehensile
- Acrididea
- Caelifera
- Orthoptera
See also Stictogryllacris punctata
- Panorthoptera
- Orthopterida
- Polyorthoptera
- Anartioptera
See also: Episyrphus balteatus, Zebronia phenice, Laelia robusta, Hagenomyia tristis, Vespula germanica, Synagris proserpina, Astata tropicalis, Melolontha melolontha, Otiorhynchus atroapterus, Malachius bipustulatus, Pephricus, Anoplocnemis curvipes, Anthia fornasiini,
- Pterygota
- Dicondylia
- Insecta
- Hexapoda
- Arthropoda
See also Ligia oceanica, Dicranopalpus ramosus, Enoplognatha ovata, Argiope bruennichi and Hyllus argyrotoxus.
- Ecdysozoa
- Protostomia
- Nephrozoa
See also Chiromantis xerampelina, Thelotornis capensis, Trachylepis varia, Lygodactylus capensis, Ardea goliath, Chalcophaps indica, Sterna hirundo, Synchiropus splendidus and Hipposideros vittatus.
- Bilateralia
- Eumetazoa
- Animalia
- Eukaryota
And to give you a short break after all that text, here's the male:
Lobosceliana loboscelis male in August 2011, in Chongwe, Lusaka, Zambia. Photograph taken using Olympus E-420 DSLR, Zuiko 40-150mm lens and 2 KOOD magnifiers. |
And that's all, folks!
UPDATE: After a more recent (January 2014) encounter with a female L. loboscelis, I can now report of an interesting defensive display: at night, when resting, they puff air out of their abdomen and periodically violently kick out their legs if touched, thereby giving a fair impression of a disgruntled puff adder (an impression that is rather detracted from if a torch is close at hand). Enough to make my blood pound before I saw what it was, at any rate.
Lobosceliana are my favorite grasshoppers for no reason I can clearly explain. I just love them. Haha
ReplyDeleteLobosceliana are my favorite grasshoppers for no reason I can clearly explain. I just love them. Haha
ReplyDelete