Bugmankeith
Well-known member
I was always wondering this, if females can’t fly how do mantids spread in areas, like areas surrounded by roads?
No that’s not what I meant. How do mantid populations spread in distance to new areas if the females can’t fly?The females release pheromones to attract the males... all she has to do is wait. Males can detect the pheromones from surprisingly great distances.
It's a slow progression which I imagine varies by species. After mating the female is going to search for a place to lay her ooth. She may lay in the same general area or she may walk to another location... her only 2 options. If it means crossing a road, she has to take her chances like every other creature. Her nymphs will repeat the process. The greater distance the female travels, the faster the spread. Does that make any sense?
Such an interesting question. I hope one of the entomologist members chime in on this one.
Yep. Slow and steady! Good topic though, I never really thought about it like that. If females could fly they'd spread around a lot more. Too bad, lol...I agree with @Synapze. Also, for example, a chinese mantis has hundreds of nymphs, which have to disperse quickly to keep from being cannibalized. As those nymphs grow, they wander to find food, and I imagine they could cross very long distances just wandering as they grow.
- MantisGirl13
No, they don't.Don’t hatchlings use silk to ‘balloon’ in the wind, similar to some spiders and caterpillars, that would allow them to spread quickly
Why would you have a female orchid outside???They certainly can fly. I had one female orchid take off outside like a sparrow and up over tall oak trees. And gone!
I've read it's mainly up to the males flying abilities and longer antenna for finding and smelling the females. (The reason why males have both those abilities; to find females that is.) So at night the males go searching around for females led by their antennae smell.The ability of females to sustain flight is dependent on species. Most can, some cannot. I believe the original question was about population distribution of species in which the females are generally flightless.
But how does that allow them to spread state to state? Maybe from trees and plants that get cut?If they can't fly they have to walk. Many native species in North America have flightless females.
There are many invertebrates that cannot fly and yet are found across North America and were here before humans migrated over on the land bridge. It does take longer to walk than fly but centipedes, millipedes, springtails, isopods and many others do not have wings.But how does that allow them to spread state to state? Maybe from trees and plants that get cut?
they probably hitch rides on things too, especially man-made transportation devices...There are many invertebrates that cannot fly and yet are found across North America and were here before humans migrated over on the land bridge. It does take longer to walk than fly but centipedes, millipedes, springtails, isopods and many others do not have wings.
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