Fiordland Cave Weta vs African Migratory Locust
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Fiordland Cave Weta | African Migratory Locust |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Pachyrhamma waitomoensis | Locusta migratoria migratorioides |
| Order | Orthoptera | Orthoptera |
| Family | Rhaphidophoridae | Acrididae |
| Size | 20-40 mm body, legs much longer | 40-55 mm |
| Habitat | Caves | Farmland |
| Diet | Fungus Feeders | Omnivores |
| Regions | Oceania (New Zealand - Waitomo) | Sub-Saharan Africa |
| Conservation | Least Concern | Least Concern |
Fiordland Cave Weta
A large cave weta found in the cave systems of the Waitomo region in New Zealand. It has very long legs and antennae adapted to navigating dark cave environments. These weta form an important part of cave ecosystems, connecting surface and underground food webs.
Did You Know?
Cave weta venture outside caves at night to feed, then return and deposit their droppings inside, providing an essential nutrient input for the entire cave ecosystem.
African Migratory Locust
A widespread African subspecies of the migratory locust that can form devastating swarms. Solitary individuals are green while gregarious ones turn brown and yellow.
Did You Know?
The phase transformation from solitary to swarming is triggered by serotonin released when locusts bump into each other in crowded conditions.