Archimantis latistyla
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Large brown mantis | ||||||||||||||||
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Archimantis latistyla underneath a carrot flower
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||||
Archimantis latistyla (Serville, 1838) |
Archimantis latistyla, commonly known as the large brown mantis (also known as the stick mantis or Australian mantis) is a species of mantid native to Australia.
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[edit] The Australian mantis
(large brown mantis) (stick mantis) Archimantis latistyla
[edit] The large brown mantis
The large brown mantids are a quite aggressive when adult and can be known to attack more larger prey than other predatory animals. The animals seen eaten include some small birds, rarely seen eating fish, frogs lizards and more. The Large brown mantids are a cannibals and are known to attack Humans if disturbed.
[edit] History
The word Mantis means Prophet (praying mantis)and it has a supernatural being mainly having a long slender thorax and an abdomen.
[edit] Behaviour
large brown mantids are quite aggressive when fully grown and can attack if not handeled properly. They can also jump about a meter from perched spot to escape enemies.
Name | Botantic | Common |
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Australian | Archimantis | Large brown |
Mantid | Latistyla | Mantid |
[edit] Keeping a large brown mantid
The large brown mantid is not suitable for a begginer and are highly recomended to some one with a better IQ on the stick mantis. For keeping them is a tricky but pleasing experience because the female is Parthenogenic meaning the female can produce an ootheca with out the males help (only females are produced).
[edit] Sub-species
The large brown mantis has a few sub species, and one of them is the stick mantis ghost from Bundabergs Turtle Sands. The stick Mantis gohst are not as aggresive as the original species but has an awsome defence tactic, The scare! The scare is a defence tactic used to make the ghost like stick mantis bigger and to scare the attacker away by flinging his arms into the air and putting her head down along with her antenna.
[edit] Reproduction
The Male stick mantis is smaller than the female and are about 99mm long and can fly, the females can not fly and are 110mm long. The Reproduction is when the male injects a single sperm at a time and can last up to half an hour.
[edit] Reproductive cycle
When the Male stick mantis is mating, he ajaculates the female with a minature penis which is then inserted into a tiny opening at the end of the females behind bits. The Males of the stick insects clip there abdomen to the females egg holding compartment and then the male inserts the single sperm, at a time.
[edit] Identification
Large Brown Mantids are light brown with short winged female and a long winged male*(footnote), the sub species from bundaberg is a pale cream white with a yellow and black eye in between the arms (1 and a half times the size of the original species).
[edit] scientific clases
Classification of the large brown mantis
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- Kingdom: Animalia
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- Phylum: Arthropoda
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- Class: Insecta
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- Order: Mantodea
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- Family: Mantidae
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- Genus: Archimantis
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- Species: Latistyla
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- Bionominal name: Archimantis Latistyla
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- Species: Latistyla
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- Genus: Archimantis
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- Family: Mantidae
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- Order: Mantodea
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- Class: Insecta
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- Phylum: Arthropoda
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- Kingdom: Animalia
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[edit] Things to avoid
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- Never release 2 females in the cage.
- Never over bloat your female or else disembowlment.
- Never use fly spray around Praying Mantids.
- Never have mantids in together.
- Never have a wide distributed Ootheca in your enclosure.
(footnote)*Long winged and short winged is the way some species of Mantids develope. The large brown mantis female has what you call "short winged" meaning that the pair of wings reach only half her abdomen and is not able to fly, but the long winged male meaning that the wings go full way over the top of the abdomen. The wings have 4 sets of wings and wing covers the top set are the covers and the bottum are the ones that actually fly.
[edit] External links
[edit] Sources
[edit] See also
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- Long & short winged-Brachypterous
- Burying mantis
- Orthodera ministralis
- A. monstrosa