Dissosteira carolina

Dissosteira carolina
Carolina Grasshopper (Dissosteira carolina)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Family: Acrididae
Subfamily: Oedipodinae
Genus: Dissosteira
Species: D. carolina
Binomial name
Dissosteira carolina
(Linnaeus, 1758)[1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Acridium carolinum (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Acridium (Oedipoda) carolinum (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Gryllus carolinus Linnaeus, 1758
  • Gryllus (Locusta) carolinus Linnaeus, 1758
  • Locusta carolina (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Oedipoda carolina (Linnaeus, 1758)

Dissosteira carolina, the Carolina grasshopper,[2] Carolina locust,[2] black-winged grasshooper,[3] road-duster[3] or quaker,[3] a large band winged species of grasshopper which ranges widely in North America inhabiting weedy grasslands.[4]

Description

Dissosteira carolina is one of the largest grasshoppers in North America at 32–58 mm in length[3] and is a conspicuous species because of its size, colorful wings, and because it habitually flies over dirt roads and other bare ground.[4] The spread wings of the males measures 75mm across while that of the females 80-102mm. They can be identified by their brownish-black wings with yellow margins and a ridge running down the back[4] and because of its large size and rather lazy bobbing flight it is often mistaken for a butterfly,[3] especially the mourning cloak Nymphalis antiopa.[5] The tegmina are colored in shades of tan, brown or grey and match the general body colour and have faint speckles.[4]

Distribution

Southern Canada through most of lower 48 United States of America except southern Florida, Gulf Coastal Plain, southwest Arizona, and bottom 2/3rds of California, marginally into far northern Mexico.[3]

Biology

Dissosteira carolina feeds on both grasses and forbs but the actual composition of the diet depends on habitat. For example, in a disturbed site that had been reseeded with Bromus inermis and Agropyron cristatum, when the adults' crop contents were examined 98 percent of the food consumed was Bromus inermis, by contrast, in a disturbed site which had not been reseeded but where weeds has colonised naturally, the adults' crop contents consisted of 33 percent native grasses and 64 percent weeds.[4] In two-choice laboratory tests it was shown that D. carolina readily fed on Bromus tectorum, Bromus inermis, Pascopyrum smithii, wheat, barley, dandelion, and Bassia. As it has a wide geographical distribution and because it is known to be polyphagous D. carolina probably has many potential food plants.[4]

In eastern Wyoming the hatching of the eggs of D. carolina may begin in early June or it may be delayed until late June. As oviposition occurs in late summer it is probable that the development of the nymph in the egg take place during the following spring.[4] The nymphs emerge from the eggs over a period of at least two weeks to develop within a habitat of grass and weeds interspersed with patches of bare ground. In some areas, however, hatching may be extended over several weeks so that as many as four different instars coexist together. The nymphal period may be 40 days at an altitude of 4,700 feet and 55 days at an altitude of 6,100 feet in Wyoming. Laboratory reared nymphs kept at a contsant temperature of 25 °C complete development in 52 daysa nd 26 days at a constant temperature of 30 °C. D, carolina is thermophilic and prefers the hot, bare areas of its habitat.[4]

Adult D. carolina appear earlier in the southern part of their range, e.g. during May in New Mexico and later in the more northerly parts of its range, e.g. July in northern Idaho. Once they acquire functional wings, they disperse extensively, adults may fly distances of several miles or more, as they have been found in the center of large cities.[4]

In the heat of the day, the male D. carolina take flight and hover, clicking their wings in a courtship display to attract females.[5] Males court females by producing a calling signal by stribulating with hindlegs and wings, the hindlegs are used alternately to rub against the tegmen in a behaviour called alternate stridulation. The male sits horizontally on sunlit bare ground and may continue to stridulate for 5 minutes or more until he is successful in attracting a female. She moves towards the male and when she is close enough he approaches her and mounts. If he is acceptable to the female they copulate and may remain copulated for as long as 16 hours.[4]

The females take a relatively long time to reach sexual maturity and it may take nine weeks from when the adults emerge to when ovipostion commences.[4]

The female selects compacted bare ground which is exposed to the sun in which to oviposit, often the edge of a gravel or dirt road. She works her ovipositor to a depth of 35mm and deposits a large clutch of eggs which are enclosed in a sharply curved pod. After approximately 80 minutes, she extracts her ovipositor and then for up to three minutes she uses her hind tarsi to brush dust and debris over the oviposition site. The pod is nearly 50mm long and usually contains more than 40 eggs.[4]

D carolina is a terrestrial, diurnal grasshopper, although they are attracted to lights on warm summer nights. Adults and nymphs shelter overnight and emerge to bask in the morning sun for two to three hours from roughly two hours after sunrise. After they have basked, the adults begin to walk and fly. Males are more active than the females which walk and fly far less than males, but feed groom and rest more. When ground temperatures reach

Hot ground temperatures of 43 °C. and air temperature of 32 °C this induces the adults to stilt. As temperatures rise, they climb on to vegetation until they are 2.5mm-7.5mm above the substrate and face into the sun so that only the front of the head is exposed to the rays and the rest of the body is in shade.[4] In the afternoon the adults bask again on bare ground from about 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. after which they walk or fly to seek shelter usually under canopies of grasses.

Predators

Dissosteira carolina are preyed on by various animals including many birds, pallid bats, spiders, praying mantis, and Sphex pensylvanicus wasps, which struggle to fly with such a heavy load.[5]

Economic importance

Dissosteira carolina is a minor pest of grasses in rangeland. It is most common in disturbed areas where the nmain food is several species of weeds. In favorable habitats the populations may irrupt, dispersing and damaging crops. Disturbed areas reseeded with Bromus inermis may give rise to large populations of D. Carolina, which then fly to fields of autumn wheat where they can cause stand damage. There was an irruption in southern Saskatchewan in 1933 and 1934 which caused considerable damage to the region's crops.Damage has been recorded to tobacco in southern Ontario, to alfalfa and in 1935 D. carolina was especially destructive to Phaseolus vulgaris or Vicia faba in the vicinity of Flagstaff, Arizona. In Oklahoma damage has been recorded in maize, sorghum, cotton and potato. To date there have been no detailed studies of the economic importance of D. carolina.[4]

References

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