praying mantis

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Web Search results for praying mantis - 1,390,000
For other uses, see Mantis (disambiguation) and Praying mantis (disambiguation). ... In Europe, the name "praying mantis" refers to only a single species, ...en.wikipedia.org
Get praying mantis profile, facts, information, photos, pictures, sounds, habitats, reports, news, and more from National Geographic.animals.nationalgeographic.com
Provides a brief description, taxonomy, photos, diet, habitat, and breeding information.www.insecta-inspecta.com
Provides general information about mantids and drawing of a carolina mantid, which is native to Ohio. Also includes information about raising and use for ...ohioline.osu.edu
Pages dedicated to the Melodic Rock band Praying Mantis who originally came out of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM)www.praying-mantis.com
Praying mantis devouring a mouse. ... Praying Mantis vs Fish - Observational Experiment. 00:25 From: KentuckyGiant. Views: 82643. Sick Praying Mantis ...www.youtube.com
after (and while) they mate, the female praying mantis devours the male.www.youtube.com
Is the 87-million-year-old praying mantis recently found encased in amber in Japan a missing link between mantises from the Cretaceous period and ...www.weirdasianews.com
Wikipedia
Mantis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Praying mantis)

For other uses, see Mantis (disambiguation) and Praying mantis (disambiguation).
Mantodea
Fossil range: Cretaceous - Recent
Large brown mantid, Archimantis latistyla underneath a carrot flower
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Animalia
Phylum:
Arthropoda
Class:
Insecta
Subclass:
Pterygota
Infraclass:
Neoptera
Superorder:
Dictyoptera
Order:
Mantodea
Families
Chaeteessidae
Metallyticidae
Mantoididae
Amorphoscelididae
Eremiaphilidae
Hymenopodidae
Liturgusidae
Mantidae
Empusidae
The insect order Mantodea or mantises consists of approximately 2,000 species[1] worldwide in temperate and tropical habitats, of which a majority are in the family Mantidae. For most of the past century, only this single family was recognized within the order, and the term "mantid" was therefore historically used for any member of the order; technically, however, the term only refers to this one family, meaning the species in the other eight recently-established families are not mantids, by definition (i.e., they are empusids, or hymenopodids, etc.), and the term "mantises" (or the more colloquial "praying mantises") should be used when referring to the entire order. Often mistakenly spelled preying mantis (an eggcorn, since they are notoriously predatory), they are in fact named for the typical "prayer-like" stance. The word mantis derives from the Greek word mantis for prophet or fortune teller. In Europe, the name "praying mantis" refers to only a single species, Mantis religiosa. The closest relatives of mantises are the orders Isoptera (termites) and Blattodea (cockroaches), and these three groups together are sometimes ranked as an order rather than a superorder.
The foreleg modifications
Mantises are notable for their hunting abilities. They are exclusively predatory, and their diet usually consists of living insects, including flies and aphids; larger species have been known to prey on small lizards, frogs, birds, snakes, and even rodents. Most mantises are ambush predators, waiting for prey to stray too near. The mantis then lashes out at remarkable speed. Some ground and bark species, however, pursue their prey rather quickly. Prey are caught and held securely with grasping, spiked forelegs ("raptorial legs"); the first thoracic segment, the prothorax, is commonly elongated and flexibly articulated, allowing for greater range of movement of the front limbs while the remainder of the body remains more or less immobile. The articulation of the head is also remarkably flexible, permitting nearly 300 degrees of movement in some species, allowing for a great range of vision (their compound eyes have a large binocular field of vision) without having to move the remainder of the body. As their hunting relies heavily on vision, they are primarily diurnal, but many species will fly at night, and can be commonly encountered at lights.
Mantises are masters of camouflage and most species make use of protective coloration to blend in with the foliage or substrate, both to avoid predators themselves, and to better snare their victims. Various species have adapted to not only blend with the foliage, but to mimic it, appearing as either living or withered leaves, sticks, tree bark, blades of grass, flowers, or even stones. Some species in Africa and Australia are able to turn black after a molt following a fire in the region to blend in with the fire ravaged landscape (fire melanism). While mantises can bite, they have no venom, and are not dangerous to humans. They do not appear to be chemically protected; nearly any large predatory animal will eat a mantis if it is able to detect it (mantises are generally quite aggressive towards one another, in fact, and most species are readily cannibalistic when given the opportunity).

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