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Family TETTIGONIIDAE
This page contains pictures and information about the Spine-headed Katydids that we found in the
Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia.

- Female, body
length 40mm
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- The Spine-headed Katydids are active at night. They hide in their nest
during the day.
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- Mid summer in Karawatha Forest, we were chasing a Common
Pardillana nymph. It jumped and land on a
bundle of leaves, looked like a nest or something. We knew there must be
something inside. We changed our point of interest to this nest. We carefully
opened it and found the Spine-headed Katydid
nymph hiding inside.
-

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- We took the nymph home, fed it with fresh gum leaves. Few days later, it
did the final moulting and became an adult. From its long sword-like
ovipositor we can tell it is a female. When it just came out from the last
moulting, it was pale brown in colour. It body was still soft, had to wait
for a few hours for its skin to became harden.
-

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- Then the dark colour patterns also appeared on its body. The first thing
the Katydid did after moulting was to eat its old shell.
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- Reference:
- 1. Insects
of Australia - CSIRO, Division of Entomology, Melbourne University
Press, 2nd Edition 1991, p382.
- 2. Grasshopper Country - the Abundant Orthopteroid Insects of Australia, D
Rentz, UNSW Press, 1996, p96.
- 3. Nicsara sp. (bifasciata?) - Conocephalinae,
Tettigoniidae, Insects of Townsville, Australia, by Graeme Cocks.
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