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Type: Review Article
Published: 2014-10-13
Page range: 1-39
Abstract views: 354
PDF downloaded: 209

Patterns in Orthoptera biodiversity. I. Adaptations in ecological and evolutionary contexts

Ph. D. (Professor), Profesor Titular de Biología, Universidad Nacional de Rio Negro, Río Negro, ARGENTINA
Anti-predator defenses cricket feeding habits grasshopper habitat katydid locust phase polyphenism weta.

Abstract

The Orthoptera have inhabited the Earth for ca 300 million years and today include about 25,000 described species. Although orthopterans are mainly known to the general public by their most conspicuous species such as rangeland grasshoppers, locusts, katydids and crickets, they include an amazing diversity of forms and life-styles. In this review, I bring together a series of facts about orthopteran biology that demonstrate their enormous biodiversity, concentrating on ecological and evolutionary characteristics such as habitat variation, modes of feeding, defense mechanisms and phase transformation. In a second part of this review I will consider subjects of more direct human interest as their use as food, their importance in folk medicine and their role as entertainment.