Colossopus grandidieri

Colossopus grandidieri

''Colossopus grandidieri'' is a nocturnal bush cricket endemic to southwestern Madagascar. ''C. grandidieri'' appears to be omnivorous and is the only member of its genus that has been bred successfully in captivity, with a diet including leaves, fruit, living and dead insects, and processed food including dog food and fish flakes.
Big weird terrestrial katydid, Colossopus grandidieri One generally thinks of katydids as graceful green arboreal creatures. This is the opposite of that. Colossopus grandidieri,Fall,Geotagged,Madagascar

Appearance

The pale brown, cigar-shaped eggs are deposited singly in soil, measuring only 6 mm when laid and swelling in size as they develop over three months to a year. Females lay 150 to 200 eggs in a lifetime. Adult females and males have similar coloration, except that the labrum is orange-red in females and yellow-orange in males. When confronted, adults rear up on their hind legs, spread their forelegs, and open their mandibles in a defensive posture. Adult males make a shrill noise when in this position, and adult females do not make a sound. If the disturbing organism approaches, ''C. grandidieri'' attempts to grab it with the forelegs and bite it with the jaws.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderOrthoptera
FamilyTettigoniidae
GenusColossopus
SpeciesC. grandidieri
Photographed in
Madagascar