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Anostostomatidae

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Anostostomatidae
Poor Knights giant wētā, Deinacrida fallai
Overall length 20 cm (8 in)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Superfamily: Stenopelmatoidea
Family: Anostostomatidae
Saussure, 1859
Subfamilies and Genera

See text

Anostostomatidae is a family of insects in the order Orthoptera, widely distributed in the southern hemisphere. It is named Mimnermidae or Henicidae in some taxonomies, and common names include king crickets in South Africa and wētā in New Zealand (although not all wētā are in Anostostomatidae). Prominent members include the Parktown prawn of South Africa, and the giant wētā of New Zealand. The distribution of this family reflects a common ancestry before the fragmenting of Gondwana.

General characteristics

By virtue of their ability to cope with variations in temperature, members of the family Anostostomatidae can be found in a variety of environments including alpine, forests, grasslands, shrub lands and urban gardens. The family is widely distributed across southern hemisphere lands including South America, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. They are nocturnal and many are flightless although several flying species exist in Australia. The diet is diverse, rarely consisting of leaves, and more commonly a combination of other insects, fungi, dead animals, and fruit. An Australian king cricket can overpower and eat funnel-web spiders.[1]

Chilean king cricket, Cratomelus sp.

Taxonomy and evolution

At least one Cretaceous fossil of an anostostomatid-like cricket is known from Australia but has not been described. The modern distribution of this family in the southern hemisphere has led to speculation that members of this group owe their distribution to the breakup of the ancient supercontinent Gondwana. This may be the case but evidence for the large scale if not total submergence of continental crust in the New Zealand and New Caledonian region in the Oligocene, indicates the possibility that wētā have arrived in these locations since re-emergence of land. The fact that anostostomatid crickets also occur on some Japanese islands supports this possibility.

Male Libanasidus vittatus

Subfamilies and Genera

The Orthoptera Species File[2] lists the following;

Anabropsinae

Auth.: Rentz & Weissman, 1973 – Americas, Africa, India, E. Asia, Australasia

Anostostomatinae

Auth.: Saussure, 1859 – Africa (including Madagascar), Australia, New Zealand

Cratomelinae

Auth.: Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1888 – South America

Deinacridinae

Auth.: Karny, 1932 – Australia, New Zealand

Leiomelinae

Auth.: Gorochov, 2001 – S. America

Lezininae

Auth.: Karny, 1932 – N. Africa, Middle East

Auth.: Gorochov, 1988 – Central & S. America, Africa, PNG

Subfamily not assigned

King crickets of South Africa

The best-known species is the Parktown prawn, not to be confused with the well-known Koringkrieke or armoured ground crickets, which never have been in the family Anostostomatidae.

Henicus monstrosus is a nocturnal anostostomatid. The males are unusual in their anatomy; their heads are disproportionately large and bear forward-directed prongs. They have extremely long, curved mandibles that are functional, but seem to play no part in the eating process.[3]

Wētā of New Zealand

Defensive male Wellington tree wētā

Five genera of New Zealand wētā are part of the family Anostostomatidae:

The cave wētā species belong to a different family, the Rhaphidophoridae.

Tree wētā

Literature

  • Elizabeth Pennisi (2017). "Saving the 'god of ugly things': New Zealand battles to bring back its rodent-sized insects". Science. doi:10.1126/science.aan6940.
  • Johns, P.M. 1997: The Gondwanaland weta: family Anostostomatidae (formerly in Stenopelmatidae, Henicidae or Mimnermidae): nomenclatural problems, world checklist, new genera and species. Journal of Orthoptera Research, 6: 125–138. ISSN 1082-6467, JSTOR 3503546

References

  1. ^ King Cricket eating Funnel-web-Spider at Australian Museum website.
  2. ^ Orthoptera Species File (Version 5.0/5.0: retrieved 23 December 2018)
  3. ^ African Insect Life - SH Skaife (Longmans Green & Co,1953)