Acrophylla titan

Acrophylla titan, the titan stick insect, is the second-longest stick insect found in Australia.

Acrophylla titan
Adult female (pinned specimen)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Phasmatodea
Infraorder: Anareolatae
Family: Phasmatidae
Subfamily: Phasmatinae
Genus: Acrophylla
Species:
A. titan
Binomial name
Acrophylla titan
Macleay, 1827
Synonyms
  • Phasma titan
  • Diura titan Gray GR, 1833

It is native to south-east Queensland and New South Wales.

Description

Titan stick insect eggs

Titan stick insects are pale brown-grey in colour and can grow up to 26 centimetres (10 in) in body length. The females can be easily identified as being larger than the males. Males are able to fly but females are not.

Breeding

Titans breed during winter/summer. During the mating process, the male connects his abdomen to the lower part of the female's egg compartment. Mating can take up to 40mins and is repeated several times. The female will end up with a fat abdomen and will produce many eggs (200 to 1000) in her lifetime.

The females then flick their eggs to the ground. The eggs look like those of the children's stick insect (Tropidoderus childrenii) but they are black-grey with a small white growth. Ants pick them up and eat the growth, and leave the egg in the refinery where they hatch.

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See also

  • List of Australian stick insects and mantids
  • Spur legged phasmid
  • Children's stick insect
  • Goliath stick insect
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