APRIL 2,
2019
by Frontiers
Biodiversity
hotspot Madagascar is one of the world's biggest islands, and home to some of
its biggest insects. Now German scientists have discovered two new species of
giant stick insect, living only in the dry forests of Madagascar's northernmost
tip.
One giant
female measures a whopping 24cm—but it is the smaller males that are most striking. At sexual maturity these
daredevils abandon their stick-like camouflage for dazzling blue or
many-colored shining armor.
Writing
in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, the researchers describe their rare
and exciting findings, and wonder at the reproductive success of the least
stick-like stick insects on the planet.
When two
become four
"Nearly
all of the 3000+ known species of
stick insects try to be inconspicuous and just look like twigs," says
senior author Dr. Sven Bradler of the University of Göttingen, Germany.
"There are a very few, very large exceptions—and we have just discovered a
couple more of them."
The authors
re-examined specimens they'd previously identified as odd-looking examples of
two existing giant stick insect species, whose adult males remarkably are bright blue or
multicolored.
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