Miomantis Caffra
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''Miomantis caffra'' (common name: springbok mantis) is a species of
praying mantis Mantises are an order (Mantodea) of insects that contains over 2,400 species in about 460 genera in 33 families. The largest family is the Mantidae ("mantids"). Mantises are distributed worldwide in temperate ...
native to southern Africa. It appeared in New Zealand in 1978, and was found more recently in Portugal and
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, USA, likely spread through the exotic pet trade. Females are facultatively
parthenogenetic Parthenogenesis (; from the Greek + ) is a natural form of asexual reproduction in which the embryo develops directly from an egg without need for fertilization. In animals, parthenogenesis means the development of an embryo from an unfertiliz ...
and unmated females can produce viable offspring.


Description


Ootheca

The
ootheca An ootheca (: oothecae ) is a type of egg capsule made by any member of a variety of species including mollusks (such as '' Turbinella laevigata''), mantises, and cockroaches. Etymology The word is a Latinized combination of ''oo-'', meaning " ...
(egg case) of ''M. caffra'' is 12–30 mm long with rounded sides, soft creamy-brown, fawn or beige with a terminal handle-like extension. Hatching is not synchronised, and nymphs may emerge over a period of weeks or even over two seasons. Refrigeration of ootheca in the exotic pet trade can delay their hatching. The oothecae are extremely hardy, and can survive winter to hatch even in the far south and alpine regions of New Zealand.


Nymphs

The nymphs are green or brown, body often longitudinally striped, limbs mottled, tip of abdomen curved upwards. Significant colour variation exists in nymphs and sub-adults, with bodies varying from pale straw-colour, bright green, and reddish brown, and legs varying from pale to almost black. Nymphs of ''M. caffra'' are cannibalistic, and will attack and eat one-another even in the presence of alternative prey. They do not discriminate against killing their own siblings, and in encounters between two nymphs, the larger usually eats the smaller.


Adults

Adults of ''M. caffra'' are usually 32–60 mm long, pale green or brown, occasionally with pink or purplish colouration near base of fore-wing; hind wings are green or bright yellow.
Pronotum The prothorax is the foremost of the three segments in the thorax of an insect, and bears the first pair of legs. Its principal sclerites (exoskeletal plates) are the pronotum (dorsal), the prosternum (ventral), and the propleuron (lateral) on e ...
narrower than head, approximately 1/3 of body length, rounded dorsally and swollen over the leg attachment. There are dark pigment spots on the inner surface of the fore-femur. Males are smaller, more slender and have longer antennae than females. The abdomen of an egg-bearing female extends well beyond the wings.


Behavior

In its natural environment, ''M. caffra'' tends to hide under leaves. Females of this species exhibit pre-copulatory cannibalism although males are sometimes eaten immediately after copulation.


New Zealand

In New Zealand ''M. caffra'' is commonly referred to as the springbok mantis or the South African praying mantis. The first specimens to be found in New Zealand were nymphs collected by an Auckland schoolboy at his home in
New Lynn New Lynn is a residential suburb in West Auckland, New Zealand, West Auckland, New Zealand, located 10 kilometres to the southwest of the Auckland CBD, Auckland city centre. The suburb is located along the Whau River, one of the narrowest poi ...
, Auckland during February 1978. These were reared to adulthood and a colony based on them was established and maintained by the Entomology Division, DSIR. Initially their identity caused problems as the specimens were unlike any other Australian or Pacific species examined. Finally Dr A. Kaltenbach of the
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,
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, identified the specimens as a common Southern African species, ''Miomantis caffra''. Although not considered a pest species, it is thought to be displacing the New Zealand native species ('' Orthodera novaezealandiae'') in urban environments of northern New Zealand. This displacement may be facilitated by the attraction of the native mantis males to females of ''M. caffra,'' which often results in their deaths due to sexual cannibalism.


References

* New Zealand Entomologist, 1984, Vol 8. Miomantis caffra, a new mantid record (Mantodea: Mantidae) for New Zealand. G. W. RAMSAY
NZ Landcare Research
{{Taxonbar, from=Q6871434 caffra Mantodea of Africa Insects of South Africa Arthropods of Southern Africa Insects described in 1871 Mantodea of New Zealand Taxa named by Henri Louis Frédéric de Saussure