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Australian Journal of Zoology Australian Journal of Zoology Society
Evolutionary, molecular and comparative zoology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Observations on the biology of some morabine grasshoppers

RE Blackith and RM Blackith

Australian Journal of Zoology 17(1) 1 - 12
Published: 1969

Abstract

The Morabinae of Australia (0rthoptera : Eumastacidae) include species which come to maturity in the winter and those which do so in the summer; both have high threshold temperatures for development. For complete development nymphs of "winter" species require temperatures above 24°C in the later instars of the females, but "summer" species require high temperatures at all stages and in both sexes. The eggs require about 7 days of moisture and will then hatch, even if in dry sand, in about 30 days at 30-35°C; only the eggs of winter species will hatch at temperatures below 25°C. The eggs lose negligible amounts of water once partly developed. Water is absorbed until the weight of the egg is about doubled, but saline water is lethal above about 2% salt concentration and sublethal concentrations delay absorption of water. Adults rarely reach population densities greater than one morabine per square metre. The adults are long-lived, up to 16 weeks in the field and 30 weeks in the laboratory, and may move as much as 5 m in a week. Morabines have an annual life cycle with no true diapause. The eggs of some species may spend up to 6 months in the soil.

https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO9690001

© CSIRO 1969

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