Typophyllum spurioculis explained

Typophyllum spurioculis is a species of day-camouflage leaf-mimicking katydids belonging to the genus Typophyllum.[1] [2] T. spurioculis lived in South America in the Andean cloud forest from western Ecuador, to Columbia in the middle central cordillera mountain range. They live in a habitat that revives 2000 millimeters to 4000 millimeters of rainfall and at elevations from 1850 meters to 2600 meters.[3]

Description

The legs on T. spurioculis have bright orange spots on them. Females of this species are larger than the males of this species.[4]

Camouflage

The camouflage of typophyllum spurioculis appear as if they are bite-damaged leafs. The body of T. spurioculis also have areas with necrotic spots. Their camouflage is so effective that they look nearly invisible to the human eye.

Notes and References

  1. News: New Species of Leaf-Mimicking Insect Discovered in South America. Sci-News. 20 November 2017.
  2. News: New insect species mimics dead leaves for camouflage. Phys.org. 20 November 2017.
  3. Baker . Andrew . Sarria-S . Fabio A. . Morris . Glenn K. . Jonsson . Thorin . Montealegre-Z . Fernando . 2017-09-01 . Wing resonances in a new dead-leaf-mimic katydid (Tettigoniidae: Pterochrozinae) from the Andean cloud forests . Zoologischer Anzeiger . 270 . 60–70 . 10.1016/j.jcz.2017.10.001 . 0044-5231.
  4. Web site: Evans . Cerri . Lincoln . University of . New insect species mimics dead leaves for camouflage . 2023-10-25 . phys.org . en.