Orthoptera of North Carolina
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Comments
Scientific Name:
Common Name:
Family (Alpha):
ACRIDIDAE
GRYLLACRIDIDAE
GRYLLIDAE
GRYLLOTALPIDAE
RHAPHIDOPHORIDAE
ROMALEIDAE
TETRIGIDAE
TETTIGONIIDAE
TRIDACTYLIDAE
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Acrididae Members:
Metaleptea brevicornis
Schistocerca alutacea
Schistocerca americana
Schistocerca damnifica
Schistocerca lineata
Schistocerca obscura
Schistocerca rubiginosa
Schistocerca unidentified species
Amblytropidia mysteca
Syrbula admirabilis
Chloealtis conspersa
Eritettix simplex
Pseudochorthippus curtipennis
Mermiria unidentified species
Mermiria bivittata
Mermiria intertexta
Mermiria picta
Dichromorpha elegans
Dichromorpha viridis
Orphulella pelidna
Orphulella speciosa
Leptysma marginicollis
Stenacris vitreipennis
Campylacantha olivacea
Paratylotropidia beutenmuelleri
Eotettix pusillus
Hesperotettix viridis
Hesperotettix viridis brevipennis
Melanoplus unidentified species
Melanoplus viridipes group unidentified species
Melanoplus acrophilus
Melanoplus angustipennis
Melanoplus attenuatus
Melanoplus bispinosus
Melanoplus bivittatus
Melanoplus carnegiei
Melanoplus celatus
Melanoplus cherokee
Melanoplus confusus
Melanoplus coreyi
Melanoplus deceptus
Melanoplus decoratus
Melanoplus decorus
Melanoplus devius
Melanoplus differentialis
Melanoplus divergens
Melanoplus eurycercus
Melanoplus femurrubrum
Melanoplus hubbelli
Melanoplus impudicus
Melanoplus keeleri
Melanoplus keeleri keeleri
Melanoplus keeleri luridus
Melanoplus mirus
Melanoplus n. sp. 35
Melanoplus n. sp. 6
Melanoplus nigrescens
Melanoplus nossi
Melanoplus nubilus
Melanoplus pachycercus
Melanoplus propinquus
Melanoplus punctulatus
Melanoplus punctulatus arboreus
Melanoplus punctulatus punctulatus
Melanoplus sanguinipes
Melanoplus sanguinipes atlanis
Melanoplus sanguinipes defectus
Melanoplus scudderi
Melanoplus serrulatus
Melanoplus similis
Melanoplus strumosus
Melanoplus sylvestris
Melanoplus tribulus
Melanoplus walshii
Paroxya atlantica
Paroxya clavuligera
Booneacris variegata
Dendrotettix australis
Dendrotettix zimmermanni
Stethophyma celatum
Arphia unidentified species
Arphia granulata
Arphia sulphurea
Arphia xanthoptera
Chortophaga australior
Chortophaga viridifasciata
Chortophaga unidentified species
Encoptolophus sordidus
Hippiscus ocelote
Pardalophora apiculata
Pardalophora phoenicoptera
Psinidia fenestralis
Trachyrhachys kiowa
Dissosteira carolina
Spharagemon bolli
Spharagemon cristatum
Spharagemon marmorata
Spharagemon marmorata picta
Trimerotropis maritima
Trimerotropis saxatilis
NC
Records
Melanoplus attenuatus
Scudder, 1897 - Slender-bodied Melanoplus
No image for this species.
Taxonomy
Family:
Acrididae
Subfamily:
Melanoplinae
Tribe:
Melanoplini
Comments:
Melanoplus is our largest genus of Orthopterans, with over 350 species occurring in North America (Cigliano et al., 2017). 38 species have been recorded in North Carolina. Rehn and Hebard (1916a) included attenuatus in the Decorus species group, which also include M. decorus and M. nubilus in North Carolina, and M. australis south of our area.
Species Status:
The type specimens were collected by Parker-Maynard at Southport (= Smithville), North Carolina (Scudder, 1897)
Identification
Field Guide Descriptions:
Online Photographs:
Photographs of specimens are shown on the Orthoptera Species File (Cigliano et al., 2017) at http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Common/basic/Taxa.aspx?TaxonNameID=1110121 , Google
Images
,
iNaturalist
,
GBIF
Technical Description, Adults/Nymphs:
Scudder (1897); Rehn and Hebard (1916a); Blatchley (1920)
Comments:
A small, short-winged (flightless) grasshopper. Adults are yellowish-green with black markings on the head behind the eye, a black stripe on the sides of the thorax, and black blotches on the dorsal sides of the abdomen. Legs are unmarked. Coloration and pattern are similar to several other species in the Decorus species group (of Rehn and Hebard, 1916a). The black stripe on the sides of the thorax usually end abruptly where the principal sulcus divides the prozona from the metazona, similar to M. nubilus but differing from decorus, where it often continues at least shortly onto the metazona (Rehn and Hebard, 1916a). Eotettix pusillus, which co-occurs with decorus, is another similar species but has an unbroken white crescent behind its eye, often has a broken rather than continuous black stripe on the sides of the thorax, and has yellowish rather than greenish hind tibiae.
Structural Features:
Melanoplus attenuatus is most safely distinguished from M. decorus and nubilus by the shape of the expanded end of the male cerci: in both attenuatus and nubilus, this knob is somewhat bifid -- i.e., with a ventral projection at the terminal end -- whereas it is rounded in decorus. Compared to nubilus, the expanded dorsal part of the knob is more rounded, not squared off (Rehn and Hebard, 1916a; Blatchley, 1920). The furcula is less than 1/3 as long as the supra-anal plate in nublilus and attenuatus but longer in decorus, whose fingers are also more divergent. The subgenital plate in both nubilus and attenuatus has a submarginal tubercle, whereas in decorus, a tubercle is located at the apex of this plate. (Rehn and Hebard, 1916a; Blatchley, 1920). Eotettix pusillus is also easily distinguished from decorus by its sub-conical cerci and by the shape of its fore-wings, which are nearly circular rather than oval.
Structural photos
Secondary male reproductive structures: M. decorus, Craven Co., 16-June-95, SPH; M. nubilus, Brunswick Co., 25-Aug-95, SPH; M. attentuatus, Richmond County, SC, 10-Aug-93, SPH; Eotettix pusillus, Pender County, 17-April-95, SPH
Nymphal Stages and Development:
Not described
Distribution in North Carolina
County Map:
Clicking on a county returns the records for the species in that county.
Adult Dates:
High Mountains (HM) ≥ 4,000 ft.
Low Mountains (LM) < 4,000 ft.
Piedmont (Pd)
Coastal Plain (CP)
Click on graph to enlarge
Habitats and Life History
Habitats:
The habitat at the type locality is not given but is likely to be coastal evergreen scrub. Rehn and Hebard (1916a) also report finding it on a barrier island (Sullivan Island) in South Carolina, where it was found in "somewhat marshy, sandy ground covered with low vegetation". At two other locations in the vicinity of Charleston, they found it in "pine woods in the low heavy undergrowth of plants and scrub oaks less than a foot in height" and in "a depression overgrown with tall grasses in long-leaf pine woods". Further inland near Augusta, Georgia, they found it in similar longleaf habitats, "in short grasses in a somewhat swampy spot". Specimens collected by S. Hall at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, were found in boggy sandhill seeps very similar to those found at Fort Bragg.
Diet:
Found in low shrubs as well as grassy areas and may feed on the foliage of a variety of forbs, grasses, and shrubs
Observation Methods:
Adults are diurnal; they appeared to be fairly common at Fort Jackson in the Fall-line Sandhills of South Carolina (Hall, pers. obs.).
Abundance/Frequency:
Adult Phenology:
The three males collected by Parker-Maynard were all caught on November 22 (year not given by Scudder) (Scudder, 1897). Adults collected by Hall in South Carolina were found on August 9, 1993.
Status in North Carolina
Natural Heritage Program Status:
SR
Natural Heritage Program Ranks:
G2G3 SH
State Protection:
Listed as Significantly Rare in North Carolina by the Natural Heritage Program. It has no legal protection, however, although permits are required to collect it on state parks and other public lands.
Comments:
This species has apparently not been recorded in North Carolina since the type specimens were collected in the 1890s. Although the immediate vicinity of Southport has not been searched, extensive grasshopper collections were made by Hall in both the Boiling Spring Lakes Wetland Complex just a short way inland from Southport and at the Green Swamp and other likely habitats in Brunswick and Columbus Counties. All specimens belonging to the Decorus species group were Melanoplus nubilus. If this species is not extirpated from the state, it probably shares the same conservation status as the other members of this species group, with the same management recommendations.