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Showing posts with label Megamareta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Megamareta. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 October 2024

Annual Cattana Wetlands Night Walk

 The 2024 Cattana wetlands Nightwalk was held on 28 September. It was a perfect night, warm and dry,


We counted 123 eager participants. Many had returned from previous years but there were other "newies" who had seldom ventured out in the dark to see what was happening in their gardens.

We divided into 4 groups and took off in various directions. Some did not go far and saw a variety of insects, spiders, frogs and lizards within the vicinity of the light sheets. Others were more adventurous and took off to find a crocodile---they were rewarded, fortunately the crocs were under a metre in length!


Lights were set up under the picnic area for folks who did not want to travel far and a variety of moths and other insects delighted them.

A highlight at the light sheet was the day-flying moth, Dysphania numana. It was probably spending the night nearby and was confused by the strong lights. 

Night time is great for orthopteroid insects. They are easily seen as they venture out for food and mates and are approachable with a camera. This is a nymph of an agraeciine conocephaline (quite a mouthful!) that is about half grown. It will eventually be fully winged when it becomes an adult.

This is a Raspy Cricket (family Gryllacrididae), probably the genus Nunkeria. The long ovipositor tells us it is a female and that it lays its eggs in the ground. Raspy Crickets are so called because they can produce a sound by rubbing the insides of their hind legs against a series of minute pegs on the adjacent side of the abdomen. This results in a characterisitc rasping sound. These crickets can also produce "silk" from secretions from their moutnparts. The silk comes out in strands and is used by some species to tie leaves together to form a shelter where they spend the daylight hours or in other species to reinforce the sides of their burrows in the ground. Some of these species use the silk to build a cap to the burrow by holding sand grains in place. This is similar to the situation with Trap-door Spiders.

Spiders are always a hit with the night walk crowds, especially the children. This orb-weaver, probably Tetragnatha sp, is a male judging by the expanded chelicerae. It was in the middle of "web management" when we stumbled by.


But the entomological night went to the Cockroaches with one new species and one undescribed genus discovered.
Cockroaches are photogenic at night. If you are careful, they will continue their activities and not scurry away as they would during the day. This one is a member of the subfamily Blattellinae.

This is a fairly common, plain cockroach across the far north tropics. It is called the Pandanus Cockroach, Megamareta phaneropyga. It is nocturnal and not exclusively associated with Pandanus, although they are not usually found very far from that plant. It would never survive your home.

Most cockroaches are nocturnal. They venture forth at night from their shelters in unfurling leaves or from protection in leaf litter. They forage on leaf surfaces for pollen, floral parts and any other "digestible" food. They frequently feed on undigested bits in bird droppings. This is an undescribed species in the genus Carbrunneria.
The patterns on the thorax are ussually species distinctive in colour and design in many cockroaches and have beeen used in identification.

We will probably have another Night Tour at Cattana early in the new year, weather permitting.








Monday, 4 January 2016

New Year's Eve 2015- A Cockroach Bonanza!

Click on the images to see them in larger size
We spent part of New Year's Eve with hundreds of other people sitting on the sand at Clifton Beach, just north of Cairns, Queensland. It was a pleasant night with no rain and bearable humidity.

It took a while for the fireworks to get underway, and I decided to have a look at the strand vegetation, just above the the highest of the high tide mark.

To my delight I discovered a treasure trove of local cockroaches.
They were on a oddly named shrub called Sea Lettuce Tree, Scaevola taccada.
This is a widespread native coastal plant.
The fruits are eaten by a Silvereyes, Cassowaries and small mammals. As you will see below, the flowers are attractive to insects, and at night, especially cockroaches.
Here a the widespread small cockroach, Balta scripta Hebard,  is feeding on exudates from the buds and developing seeds of the Scaevola.

Balta scripta is a very widespread and common cockroach in northern Queensland. It has a very broad range of habitat preferences ranging from this coastal strand habitat to the much more arid inland mixed woodland an grassland sites. Wherever it is found, it is common.

The strand flora at Clifton Beach comprises a mixture of native and local plants. There is a small reserve where a creek empties into the ocean that may harbour reptiles of the more bitey kind.

A dominant plant beyond the Scaevola is Singapore Daisy, Sphagneticola trilobata, a central American native that, although very attractive, has gotten away with itself. It occurs in marginal habitats in northern Queensland and outcompetes native plants, literally overtaking them. It can occupy long stretches of rainforest edges. It propagates from nodes and is difficult to control.

The prolific flowers are loaded with pollen and that attracts insects.
Here we see one of the many undescribed species of Johnrehnia with Singapore Daisy pollen attached to its antennae.
Note the pollen!

Here we see two undescribed species of the diverse genus Johnrehnia on the leaves of Singapore Daisy.

 Normally nocturnal cockroaches wander about at night and feed on particulate matter on leaf surfaces. It is like a smorgasbord to them!

Above are two undescribed species of Johnrehnia searching for food, the top on a Singapore Daisy leaf, the other on Mangrove Lily, Crinum pedunculatum. This plant is a native but is cultivated and the ones at Clifton Beach have been planted. They provide a very acceptable habitats to a variety of insects.

Above Johnrehnia sp feeds on Singapore Daisy pollen. Note the nymphs (small cockroaches) which may be young of its species or some other cockroach.
Another undescribed species of Johnrehnia attracted to the pollen banquet.

 Present in smaller numbers was this slightly larger native cockroach, Carbrunneria barrinensis Roth. It was also found feeding on Singapore Daisy pollen.
This very flat cockroach, Megamareta phaneropyga (Chopard) spends the daylight hours in leaf axils of pandanus, which was present in the area. Developing Crinum leaves, as well,  also harbour this species during the day.
All of the above cockroaches are in the very large family Ectobiidae. Two representatives of another family, the Blaberidae, were found in the strand vegeation at Clifton Beach. The one above is a species of the large and widespread genus Calolampra. Males are fully winged and commonly fly to lights. Females are flightless and live in leaf litter.
The Surinam Cockroach, Pycnoscelus surinamensis (Linnaeus) is a widespread, introduced cockroach whose origins are a mystery despite its common name. It is parthenogenetic. That means that it is represented only by females. So it takes only one individual to start a colony. That is how it gets around so easily. It occurs in suitable habitats along the east coast from Queensland to New South Wales. It does not seem to enter houses but can be found in compost heaps, gutters and here in a natural habitat where there is plenty of cover, food and high humidity. This is one of several cockroaches that is "falsely" ovoviviparous. Females produce an ootheca, eggcase, from which the young emerge while it is carried around by their mother. The young cluster around the mother feeding on exudates that she produces. Eventually they go off on their own. This was the least common of the cockroaches encountered on New Year's Eve. It can easily be moved around in compost, pot plants and the like.
 Other orthopteroid insects similarly attracted to the strand flora are this Raspy Cricket, Hyalogryllacris sp. This is a last instar and is probably preparing to moult into an adult under the cover of darkness.
 This predatory katydid, Phisis jinae Rentz was described from Green Island, not far from Clifton Beach. It has been subsequently found along the coast in several localities and always in the strand  and mangrove flora. It too is a last instar and appears to be readying itself to moult into an adult.
The Northern Grass Pyrgomorph, Atractomorpha similis Bolivar, is very widespread in northern and eastern Australia. It prefers grassy habitats and is commonly found in the strand vegetation along beaches.
These small stinkbugs, Pentatomidae, are using the Scaevola leaves for a get together.
This crambid moth, Nacoleia glageropa, is a very common species and it is probably attracted to the the pollen and nectar of the flowering plants.
The "abundance of riches" brings along the vertebrate predators. This is a small Mourning Gecko, Lepidodactylus lugubris. A cockroach would be a very suitable New Year's feast.
A larger Mourning Gecko lying in wait for a meal.

It should be stressed that all of the above cockroaches, with the possible exception of the Pycnoscelus, are native species and would not find your pantry suitable for survival. On the other hand, they live mostly in leaf litter, in large numbers, and they are probably very important in the breakdown of this material and its return to soil. Because their numbers are so high, they are most likely important food sources for vertebrates such as birds, lizards and frogs as well as other insects. So they should be encouraged. They are probably important pollinators of native plants as well.

The take home message here is that these insects are important members of our biota. Prescribed burning of their habitat will result in their loss for many years and eliminate the roles that they fulfil.