Nihoa Conehead Katydid

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Nihoa Conehead Katydid

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Family: Tettigoniidae
Genus: Banza
Species: B. nihoa
Binomial name
Banza nihoa

The Nihoa Conehead Katydid (Banza nihoa) is one of the many endemic species on the island of Nihoa in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. It is one of the ten species in the Banza genus, all of them native to Hawaii. It gets its food mostly from plant leaves, but because of the low population, it does not do significant damage. Unlike Main Islands' species, whose males leap on the females before mating, the Nihoa variants sing to them (Rauzon, 20). It is a threatened species.

[edit] References

  • N. Evenhuis and L. Eldredge, Natural History of Nihoa and Necker Islands, Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu, 2004.
  • M. Rauzon, Isles of Refuge: Wildlife and History of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 2001.