Cyclochila australasiae explained

Cyclochila australasiae is a species of cicada and one of Australia's most familiar insects. It is distributed through coastal regions of southeastern Australia.[1] Green specimens are commonly known as green grocers and yellow ones as yellow mondays.

It is one of the loudest insects in the world.[2]

Taxonomy

Cyclochila australasiae was first described as Tettigonia australasiae in 1805 by amateur zoologist Edward Donovan, who reported that it was common in New South Wales and many specimens had been collected and sent to England.[3] Ernst Friedrich Germar named it Cicada olivacea in 1830. It was the second Australian species of cicada described after the double drummer (Thopha saccata).[4]

It was formerly commonly known as the Great Green Cicada; in addition, the various colour forms have different vernacular names, including Yellow Monday for a common yellow morph; Chocolate Soldier for a rare dark tan form; Blue Moon for a rare turquoise form; and Masked Devil for its red-orange form.[5] The names for the green and yellow forms have been recorded since at least 1896.[5] Australian entomologist Walter Wilson Froggatt reported that the green form was known as green Monday (alongside yellow Monday for the yellow form) in his 1907 work Australian Insects.[6]

Description

Cyclochila australasiae measures about 4cm (02inches) in length, with a wingspan of . Diverse colour forms are seen, the most common being predominantly green or brownish yellow. It has red eyes. The exuvia, or discarded empty exoskeleton of the nymph form, is commonly seen on tree trunks in gardens and bushland during the summer months.[1]

The loud calls of the male are heard over the summer months; harsh and high-pitched, these may reach 120 decibels.[7] The sound is made by the rapid buckling of the timbal ribs, and amplified by resonation in an air sac; the frequency is around 4.3 kHz.[8] Calls occur in the afternoon and dusk of warm days.[5]

Distribution and habitat

Cyclochila australasiae is found from Kroombit Tops in southeastern Queensland through eastern New South Wales and Victoria to the Grampians, and through to Mount Gambier in southeastern South Australia. It is common along the Great Dividing Range, and is also found in the Warrumbungles. It is commonly seen (and heard) around Sydney and Melbourne, the Blue Mountains and Gippsland. In Brisbane, it is only encountered at elevations above 300 m (1000 ft).[9] It was associated with the white stringybark (Eucalyptus globoidea) in a study at three sites in western Sydney.[10]

Life cycle

Their median total life cycle length is around six to seven years, this being from egg to a natural adult death.[11] Most of this spent as a nymph. The cicada spends seven years in nymph form drinking sap from plant roots underground before emerging from the earth as an adult. The adults, who live for six weeks, fly around, mate, and breed over the summer.[5]

Human uses

Live cicadas are often collected by climbing trees and can be kept temporarily as pets in shoeboxes. They cannot easily be kept for longer than a day or two, given that they need flowing sap for food.[12]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hangay, G. . German . P.. Insects of Australia. New Holland Press. Frenchs Forest, NSW. 2000. 58–59. 1-876334-41-X.
  2. Web site: Cicadas. Australian Museum. 2007-12-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20071217122656/http://www.amonline.net.au/factsheets/cicada.htm. 2007-12-17. dead.
  3. Book: Donovan . Edward . An epitome of the natural history of the insects of New Holland, New Zealand, New Guinea, Otaheite, and other islands in the Indian, Southern, and Pacific oceans: including the figures and descriptions of one hundred and fifty-three species of the more splendid, beautiful, and interesting insects, hitherto discovered in those countries, and which for the most part have not appeared in the works of any preceding author. . 1805 . F.C. and J. Rivington . London . pl. 10 .
  4. Book: The Natural History of Sydney . 2010 . Lunney, Daniel . Hochuli, Dieter . Hutchings, P. A. . Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales . 227. 978-0-9803272-3-6.
  5. Web site: Greengrocer, Yellow Monday Fact File. 2009. Australian Museum online - Wildlife of Sydney. Australian Museum. 2009-04-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091030091422/http://www.faunanet.gov.au/wos/factfile.cfm?Fact_ID=148 . October 30, 2009.
  6. Book: Froggatt, Walter Wilson. Australian Insects. W. Brooks. Sydney, New South Wales. 1907. 349.
  7. Web site: Cicadas: Superfamily Cicadoidea . 2019-12-08.
  8. Book: Gerhardt HC, Huber F. Acoustic communication in insects and anurans: common problems and diverse solutions. University of Chicago Press. Chicago. 2002. 33. 0-226-28832-3.
  9. Book: Moulds, Maxwell Sydney. Australian Cicadas. New South Wales University Press. Kensington, NSW. 1990. 61–65. 0-86840-139-0.
  10. Emery, D.L.. Emery, S.J.. Emery, N.J.. Popple, L.W.. 2005. A phenological study of the cicadas (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) in western Sydney, New South Wales, with notes on plant associations. Australian Entomologist. 32. 97–110.
  11. Campbell . Matthew . Genome expansion via lineage splitting and genome reduction in the cicada endosymbiont Hodgkinia - Supporting Information . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America . 18 August 2015 . 112 . 33 . 10192–10199 . 10.1073/pnas.1421386112 . 26286984 . 4547289 . 13 October 2020. free .
  12. Web site: Craig. Owen. Summer of singing cicadas. ABC Science – Environment and Nature. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 15 August 2013. 17 February 2001.