Iberian Snakefly vs Tenerife Cave Cricket
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Iberian Snakefly | Tenerife Cave Cricket |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Harraphidia laufferi | Petaloptila canariensis |
| Order | Raphidioptera | Orthoptera |
| Family | Raphidiidae | Gryllidae |
| Size | 10-14 mm | 10-15 mm |
| Habitat | Woodlands | Caves |
| Diet | Omnivores | Omnivores |
| Regions | Spain, Portugal | Canary Islands |
| Conservation | Near Threatened | Vulnerable |
Iberian Snakefly
A snakefly endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, found in cork oak and pine woodlands. It is one of several snakefly species restricted to the western Mediterranean.
Did You Know?
The Iberian Peninsula is a hotspot for snakefly diversity, hosting more species per area than almost anywhere else.
Tenerife Cave Cricket
A pale cave-dwelling cricket found in lava tubes on Tenerife. It has reduced eyes and elongated antennae adapted to life in darkness.
Did You Know?
It relies entirely on its extremely long antennae to navigate the pitch-dark cave environment.