Museums Field Guide apps species profiles – terrestrial invertebrates
- Brief description
- Wispy antennae, mottled grey-brown, abdominal bands of crimson and blue, body-length to 5 cm.
- Description
- Female squat, long-legged and flightless; male more elongate and with fully-formed wings. Both sexes have long, wispy antennae. Colour mottled grey-brown, cream-white and black, but with bands of crimson and blue – normally hidden – along the edge of each abdominal segment. Body-length up to 5 cm.
- Biology
- These insects feed mostly on fireweeds and other herbs, from which they may assimilate toxins that make them distasteful to predators. They rely on camouflage to avoid detection. When threatened, females freeze while males emit a warning call. If further threatened, the wing-covers are raised and the abdomen arched and vibrated, revealing otherwise hidden bands of shimmering crimson and electric blue. Males also sing when defending territory or courting.
- Habitat
- Mostly high-altitude grasslands, heathlands and woodlands.
- Native status
- Native to Australia.
- Maximum size (cm)
- 5
- Diet
- Herbivore
- Dangerous
- Usually harmless, but can bite.
- Colours
- black, white, grey, red, blue
- Distribution
- Eastern Australia
:o)
There might be some of those little critters up on the Tablelands about an hours drive from me.
ReplyDeleteThe same place that Miss Lisa's coffee came from. It's beautiful up there and I don't get up there nearly often enough. I'm down on the coast and we get different critters here.
There might be some of those little critters up on the Tablelands about an hours drive from me.
ReplyDeleteThe same place that Miss Lisa's coffee came from. It's beautiful up there and I don't get up there nearly often enough. I'm down on the coast and we get different critters here.
Now if we only had cute bugs like that in Joisey! :o)
Delete