Twostripped Grasshopper – Melanoplus bivittatus
Twostriped Grasshopper (Melanoplus bivittatus)
Common Name: Twostriped Grasshopper
Latin Name: Melanoplus bivittatus
Appearance:
Two striped Grasshoppers are medium to large-sized grasshoppers. Most of the time, they are brown or greenish-brown, and as the name suggests, they have two distinct stripes that run down their bodies.
- Egg:Grasshopper females lay their eggs in the ground in the late summer or fall. The eggs stay in the ground all winter and hatch in the spring.
- Larva:When the nymphs, or young grasshoppers, hatch from their eggs, they look a lot like the adults. They shed their shell several times during their growth, which helps them get bigger.
- Pupa:Grasshoppers don’t go through a complete metamorphosis, so they don’t have an actual pupal stage like insects that do. Instead, nymphs change into adults through a process called molting.
- Adult:A Two-striped Grasshopper adult can fly because its wings are fully grown. There are two clear horizontal stripes on an adult’s body, and the color and strength of these stripes can change.