Boxer mantis
Boxer mantis is a common name given to various species of praying mantis. The name comes from the way these mantises move their oversized grasping forelimbs as they communicate with each other.
Communication
When boxer mantises encounter one another, they rapidly tremble their forelimbs, displaying the patterned interior faces to each other and waving them in slow arcs. This is believed to be a way of preventing member of the same species from eating each other.[1]
Species
- Acromantis gestri Giglio-Tos, 1915 (Thai boxer mantis,[2] Thailand boxer mantis, Sumatran Acromantis)
- Acromantis japonica Westwood, 1889 (Japanese boxer mantis)
- Ephestiasula pictipes (purple boxer mantis)
- Otomantis sp. [3]
- Oxypilus distinctus (Beier, 1930)[4] (Gambian boxer mantis [5])
- Theopropus elegans (banded flower mantis, Asian boxer mantis)
gollark: Over here you choose post-16 school subjects somewhat.
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: What subjects do you do?
gollark: You cannot "guarantee" things as much as make the probability quite high.
gollark: Have you done practice exam papers of some kind? Can you work out how your score on those compares to past results?
See also
References
- Alien Insect: Praying Mantis, 2004, by Discovery Channel.
- Thailand Boxer Praying Mantis - Acromantis gestri
- "List on mantises and common names". Archived from the original on 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2008-07-29.
- http://mantodea.speciesfile.org/Common/basic/Taxa.aspx?TaxonNameID=1116
- "Oxypilus distinctus". Archived from the original on 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2008-07-29.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.