Precarious
Well-known member
Those legs are built that way so the can book! These little things are FAST. You can see that immediately after hatching they move in sudden bursts. A few took off during filming and it was a nightmare to get them in the cup. Not only because of their speed but because they lay so flat to the ground. You can't pick them up like a normal mantid. They won't climb on board if you put your finger just above their head. You have to maneuver something flat, like a piece of paper, in front of them while they're moving and hope they don't jump off as you move it to the cup.They look very strong, probably the largest proportion of leg-size to body-weight out of all the species of mantid that I have seen.
Hmmm... I'll see what I can do.lovely, just lovely, I wish you could take some pictures of a milkweed flower, I think it would be wonderful.
They're native to Thailand. If you saw a mantis with a similar build it was likely one of the bark mantid species native to North America.Any idea where these species are native to? I live in southern California and I can almost swear that I saw one of these the other day. Like you said, built more like a roach than a mantis, but now that I've seen these I'm second guessing my initial distinction upon seeing it...