by Elizabeth Howell
On a
cool and rainy night in a dense, mountainous forest in Rwanda,
insect-surveying scientists discovered a new species of praying mantis,
one whose wingless females are "vicious hunters" that prowl for prey as
if they were marauding tigers.
The researchers have named the newfound praying mantis species — which was discovered in Nyungwe National Park — Dystacta tigrifrutex, or "bush tiger mantis."
"The new species is amazing, because the fairly small female prowls
through the underbrush searching for prey, while the male flies appear
to live higher in the vegetation," stated Riley Tedrow, a Case Western
Reserve University evolutionary biology student who led the research.
Researchers found out about the species after a winged male was
attracted to a light trap the scientists had set up to study the local
insects. After fortuitously trapping a female from the leaf litter, the
scientists got another lucky break: She laid an egg case (called an
ootheca). This allowed the scientists to study the nymphs and adults in
one three-week field session, which is a rarity in insect science for
one field trip.
The
researchers compared the new specimens with those found in museums and
described in scientific papers; the scientists also looked at various
measurements of the bush tiger mantis' bodies, such as color and length.
Through these analyses, the researchers concluded the species belongs
to the genus Dystacta; until now, this genus had consisted of just one species, D. alticeps, which is spread all over Africa.
One feature could have provided a big help in identifying the species, the male genitalia.
This, however, was missing, as ants had gobbled up these vital parts
while the male dried up in the Rwandan heat, the researchers noted.
The scientists also tracked down a dozen species that were previously
not known to live in Rwanda, and urged that conservation authorities
place the park under protection so as not to endanger the new finds. A
follow-up expedition is planned in June to gauge the size of the bush
tiger's habitat.
A study based on the research will be published in the open-access journal ZooKeys.
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