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Field
Guide to Common Western Grasshoppers
by Robert
E. Pfadt
Introduction
| External Anatomy |
Names and Species | Grasshopper Populations
| Life Cycles | Seasonal
Occurrence and Behavior | Collections
and Survey | Grasslands of North America
| Food Plants | Glossary
| Selected References |
Species Fact Sheets | (PDF)
Scientific
and Common Names
Grasshoppers have been collected, studied, and named from all but
the most frigid regions of the earth. More than 10,000 species have
been classified and given scientific names. These are binomials,
a method of naming used by the Swedish biologist, Carolus Linnaeus
(1707-78) in his book, Systema Naturae. The method proved
so successful that other biologists promptly adopted it. The tenth
edition of Systema Naturae (1758) has been designated as
the official beginning for zoological nomenclature. This classic
book contains an account of the widely distributed North American
grasshopper, Dissosteira carolina (Linnaeus).
In addition to the scientific name, species of grasshoppers may
have good common names. Some are approved by the Entomological Society
of America, such as the Carolina grasshopper for D. carolina.
Nevertheless, in searching the literature and in communicating information
on species of grasshoppers, the scientific name has an unrivaled
advantage. All of the known species have scientific names while
only a small fraction have generally accepted common names.
The scientific name of a species consists of two parts.
The first is the name of the genus, a taxonomic category containing
a group of closely related species. The second part is the specific
epithet or species name. For example, Dissosteira is the
name of the grasshopper genus that contains four species; carolina
is the specific epithet of one of the four species. The two words
together, Dissosteira carolina, comprise the scientific name
of the Carolina grasshopper. After the two words the name
of the describer, Linnaeus, provides extra information. Linnaeus'
name is in parenthesis, which means that originally Linnaeus had
placed this species in a different genus (Gryllus) and another
taxonomist later revised the scientific name by placing the species
in a new or different genus. A describer who has assigned a newly
described species to an established genus is not named in parentheses,
for example Melanoplus confusus Scudder.
The scientific name is always italicized. After it has been written
in full once, it is usually abbreviated by using the initial of
the genus, followed by the full spelling of the epithet, and the
dropping of the describer's name, hence D. carolina. The
first letter of the genus name is always capitalized and the first
letter of the specific epithet is always lower case. The genus name
may be used alone when referring to the genus only or to all of
the species making up the genus such as Dissosteira or Melanoplus.
How do taxonomists choose a scientific name for a species new to
science? Rules of Latin grammar must be followed but otherwise there
is much latitude in selecting a name. If the new species can be
assigned to a valid genus, a specific epithet not already in use
within the genus is chosen. The name may describe a character of
the grasshopper or locate the region or state where it was collected.
Or it may honor a friend or a renowned scientist. For example, in
a taxonomic study published in 1897, Samuel Scudder named a new
species Melanoplus bruneri in honor of professor Lawrence
Bruner, a pioneer grasshopper specialist at the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln. To be a valid scientific name, the author must publish
the description and name of a new species in a journal article,
bulletin, or book.
As a finishing touch in establishing the authenticity of a new
species, the describer chooses a particular specimen as the type
or holotype. In the taxonomy of grasshoppers, the type selected
by the author is an adult male from which the original description
and illustrations were made. A female specimen is also chosen for
description and illustration and is specified as the allotype.
The author uses other specimens, termed material, for comparison
with the types, often describing slight differences in size and
color. These may be designated as paratypes, both males and
females.
The taxonomist must also decide on the deposition of the types
in an insect museum. If the author is a member of the staff of a
particular museum, the types are usually deposited with that museum.
In cases where the author is not employed by a museum, the types
are sent to a recognized museum. Many grasshopper types are held
in the extensive collections of the Academy of Natural Sciences
of Philadelphia, the California Academy of Sciences (San Francisco),
the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), the Lyman
Entomological Museum (Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec), and the National
Museum of Natural History (Washington, DC). These are favored museums
for the deposition of grasshopper types. The author may send the
types to one museum and paratypes to the others and, if there is
sufficient material, still other specimens to smaller museums.
Although the grasshopper fauna of North America is relatively well
known, new species continue to be found in all parts of the continent
and to be described in entomological publications. The chance is
slim, however, that a scout will pick up a new species where grasshopper
infestations occur. In most instances the scout will be able to
identify a specimen from the pages of this field guide. On occasion
a scout may collect an already described species not treated in
the guide, particularly in genera with large numbers of species
such as Melanoplus and Trimerotropis. The scout may
then resort to a state grasshopper "key" (see Selected
References).
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Species
What are species? Species in Latin merely means "kind"
and so species in an elementary sense are different kinds of organisms.
Most, if not all, species of grasshoppers can be distinguished on
the basis of obvious anatomical and behavioral characters and are
biological realities. In nature, species consist of populations
of individuals that usually occur over an extensive geographic range.
For this reason one modern view considers a species to be a genetically
distinctive group of natural populations that share a common gene
pool and are reproductively isolated from all other such groups.
The species is the largest unit of population within which effective
gene flow occurs or can occur. Higher taxonomic categories, from
the genus up, are biologists' inventions that exist only in the
human mind. Animals in the same category have anatomical similarities
showing clear relationships. Their grouping, however, is a decision
based on a mix of objective and subjective evaluations. One taxonomist's
family can easily be another's order.
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Introduction
| External Anatomy |
Names and Species | Grasshopper Populations
| Life Cycles | Seasonal
Occurrence and Behavior | Collections
and Survey | Grasslands of North America
| Food Plants | Glossary
| Selected References |
Species Fact Sheets | (PDF)
|