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==Gallery==
==Gallery==
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Dictyophorus spumans, voetganger, Elandsfontein, a.jpg|<center>Nymph</center>
Grasshopper_2017_07_02_0352c.jpg|<center>Eating ''[[Aloe arborescens|Aloe]]'' flowers</center>
Grasshopper_2017_07_02_0352c.jpg|<center>Eating ''[[Aloe arborescens|Aloe]]'' flowers</center>
Dictyophorus_spumans01.jpg|<center>Mating</center>
Dictyophorus_spumans01.jpg|<center>Mating</center>

Revision as of 13:58, 27 September 2019

Koppie foam grasshopper
in Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden, Roodepoort, South Africa
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
D. spumans
Binomial name
Dictyophorus spumans
(Thunberg, 1787)
Synonyms
  • Gryllus spumans
  • Poecilocera spumans
  • Petasia spumans
  • Phymateus spumans
  • Tapesia spumans[1]

Dictyophorus spumans, the koppie foam grasshopper or rooibaadjie, is a species of grasshopper in the family Pyrgomorphidae indigenous to Africa. The name "foaming grasshopper" derives from the insect's ability to produce a toxic foam from its thoracic glands.[2] It is closely related to Phymateus.

It grows up to a length of 80 millimetres (3.1 in). The neck shield has a warty surface, and their color is highly variable. It is toxic due to the poisons that it sequesters from its diet, which includes a large number of toxic and distasteful plants such as milkweed.[3]

Races

  • D. s. subsp. spumans – South Africa
  • D. s. subsp. ater – northern South Africa and Zimbabwe
  • D. s. subsp. pulchra – eastern South Africa and Mozambique
  • D. s. subsp. servillei – widespread in Africa
  • D. s. subsp. calceata – widespread in Africa

References

  1. ^ Googlebooks
  2. ^ Whitehouse, Christopher. "Foaming Grasshoppers". Phillipskop Mountain Reserve. Phillipskop Discovery Trails (Pty) Ltd. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  3. ^ Mike Picker, Charles Griffiths & Alan Weaving (2004). Field guide to insects of South Africa. Struik. ISBN 978-1-77007-061-5.

Media related to Dictyophorus spumans at Wikimedia Commons