Grasshoppers (locusts) look different, and are harmless herbivorous insects. And in the video there is a katydid (bush cricket). This is not a grasshopper (not a locust).
@@Vickyy11001 Well, the fact that there are insects in the same order does not negate their huge differences. For example, cats and dogs also belong to the same order, but these different animals belong to different suborders. Katydids (other crickets) and locusts (grasshoppers) are about the same. The Orthoptera order itself is divided into 2 large sub-orders : Ensifera: Infraorder Gryllidea, which includes crickets, mol crickets ant-loving crickets, Infraorder Tettigoniidea, and there include katydids, they are also bush crickets (Tettigoniidae) and the rest: Superfamily Hagloidea- grigs, Superfamily Rhaphidophoroidea (Camel Crickets, cave crickets or weta, jumping weta, camel crickets, spider cricke), Superfamily Schizodactyloidea (dune crickets), Superfamily Stenopelmatoidea (Family Anostostomatidae aka weta or royal crickets, Family Gryllacrididae Raspy cricket or leaf-rolling crickets, Family Stenopelmatidae Jerusalem crickets and others). The suborder Caelifera is the Infraorder Acrididea: grasshoppers and locusts, and also pygmy grasshoppers. Infraorder Tridactylidea pygmy mole crickets, sandgropers. And others. I don't really want to write about grasshoppers and their relatives, as they are less interesting and more of the same type. So, the suborders Ensifera (crickets, katydids) and Colifera (grasshoppers, they are also locusts) are very different, and the only thing they are similar in is appearance, the ability to jump, make sounds, gnawing mandibles, modified prothorax, wing gall. And they differ, for example, in appearance and body structure. Colifera have shorter thick antennae, a rounder head with jaws (mandibles) that are usually designed for eating plants (short, wide, blunt). They have a rather elongated body (the abdomen is longer and thinner, in females it is quite difficult to see the ovipositor at the end, since part of the locust is lost. Colifera just bury their abdomen in the ground, and lay a capsule with eggs). The legs of grasshoppers and locusts are quite short and weak (and in particular the 2 front pairs of legs, but there are exceptions). On the wings on the side and on the hips of the hind legs, some Colifera have special surfaces that they rub and emit familiar quiet chirps from the grass. But some Colifera make sounds in other ways. And the hearing organs of locusts are located on the sides of the body. By nature (to put it simply) Colifera are cowardly, harmless, cautious. Ensifera (all sorts of different crickets) sometimes look like Colifera. But Ensifera have longer, thin and very mobile antennae, which they use for various purposes. Cooloola is an exception, these tendrils are very shortened due to lifestyle. Their heads can be very different in shape. Their jaws are different, but often large and powerful. The diet depends on the species, but more often all these crickets, katydids, weta and other omnivores (but among them there are more herbivorous, and more predatory). Their body is often very massive, and their legs are long and strong. Predatory species have very powerful legs, and are dotted with rows of small spikes, and predatory katydids, king cricket, raspy cricket, dune cricket, capture prey with them, and quickly divide it into parts with their powerful mandibles. Often, spikes on the legs or on the body still serve (or exclusively serve) for self-defense, for example, in some katydids. Unlike Colifera, some Ensifera (namely katydids, crickets, raspy cricket, king crickets, camel crickets) have a well-marked and large ovipositor. Eggs are laid individually in the ground or in plants. Some do not have a long ovipositor due to their special lifestyle (mol crickets, dune crickets, Jerusalem crickets, and the surviving Hagloidea do not have a long ovipositor due to the fact that they live near or under the ground, and they simply do not need an ovipositor, they can lay eggs in a hole anyway). About chirping: Of all the Ensifera, crickets, mol crickets, katydids, Hagloidea make sounds, they have special surfaces on their wings (one with teeth, the other like a membrane), and when they move their wings, both of these surfaces rub against each other, making very loud different sounds. Other Ensifera usually do not create sounds, or simply knock their bodies on the surface (for example, some katydids, raspy crickets and jerusalem crickets do this). Some weta and katydids can rub their feet against the abdomen or the edges of their wings, the sounds are quiet and serve solely to scare off predators. The auditory organs of Ensifera are located on the lower legs of the forelegs, but not all of them have them. Ensifera can be very different in nature - cowardly, cautious, timid, mimicking, aggressive, very ferocious and cruel predators, and so on. Ensifera are more ancient. Ensifera males leave spermatophores on the bellies of females. which is easy to see. I wrote all this myself, and where I put it simplified. Katydid and grasshopper are different insects, there is no need to confuse them. Both belong to different sub-orders, which follow their own different paths.
This is a Katydid!
Grasshoppers (locusts) look different, and are harmless herbivorous insects. And in the video there is a katydid (bush cricket). This is not a grasshopper (not a locust).
Your just mad yeah
@@HakanYadigarAnd why did you write that? I'm writing about the fact that the video shows a different insect- a katydid, not a grasshopper.
@@Katydid.S both belong to the same order orthoptera
@@Vickyy11001 Well, the fact that there are insects in the same order does not negate their huge differences.
For example, cats and dogs also belong to the same order, but these different animals belong to different suborders. Katydids (other crickets) and locusts (grasshoppers) are about the same.
The Orthoptera order itself is divided into 2 large sub-orders :
Ensifera: Infraorder Gryllidea, which includes crickets, mol crickets ant-loving crickets,
Infraorder Tettigoniidea, and there include katydids, they are also bush crickets (Tettigoniidae) and the rest:
Superfamily Hagloidea- grigs,
Superfamily Rhaphidophoroidea (Camel Crickets, cave crickets or weta, jumping weta, camel crickets, spider cricke),
Superfamily Schizodactyloidea (dune crickets),
Superfamily Stenopelmatoidea (Family Anostostomatidae aka weta or royal crickets,
Family Gryllacrididae Raspy cricket or leaf-rolling crickets,
Family Stenopelmatidae Jerusalem crickets and others).
The suborder Caelifera is the Infraorder Acrididea: grasshoppers and locusts, and also pygmy grasshoppers.
Infraorder Tridactylidea pygmy mole crickets, sandgropers. And others. I don't really want to write about grasshoppers and their relatives, as they are less interesting and more of the same type.
So, the suborders Ensifera (crickets, katydids) and Colifera (grasshoppers, they are also locusts) are very different, and the only thing they are similar in is appearance, the ability to jump, make sounds, gnawing mandibles, modified prothorax, wing gall.
And they differ, for example, in appearance and body structure. Colifera have shorter thick antennae, a rounder head with jaws (mandibles) that are usually designed for eating plants (short, wide, blunt). They have a rather elongated body (the abdomen is longer and thinner, in females it is quite difficult to see the ovipositor at the end, since part of the locust is lost. Colifera just bury their abdomen in the ground, and lay a capsule with eggs). The legs of grasshoppers and locusts are quite short and weak (and in particular the 2 front pairs of legs, but there are exceptions). On the wings on the side and on the hips of the hind legs, some Colifera have special surfaces that they rub and emit familiar quiet chirps from the grass. But some Colifera make sounds in other ways. And the hearing organs of locusts are located on the sides of the body. By nature (to put it simply) Colifera are cowardly, harmless, cautious.
Ensifera (all sorts of different crickets) sometimes look like Colifera. But Ensifera have longer, thin and very mobile antennae, which they use for various purposes. Cooloola is an exception, these tendrils are very shortened due to lifestyle. Their heads can be very different in shape. Their jaws are different, but often large and powerful. The diet depends on the species, but more often all these crickets, katydids, weta and other omnivores (but among them there are more herbivorous, and more predatory). Their body is often very massive, and their legs are long and strong. Predatory species have very powerful legs, and are dotted with rows of small spikes, and predatory katydids, king cricket, raspy cricket, dune cricket, capture prey with them, and quickly divide it into parts with their powerful mandibles. Often, spikes on the legs or on the body still serve (or exclusively serve) for self-defense, for example, in some katydids.
Unlike Colifera, some Ensifera (namely katydids, crickets, raspy cricket, king crickets, camel crickets) have a well-marked and large ovipositor. Eggs are laid individually in the ground or in plants. Some do not have a long ovipositor due to their special lifestyle (mol crickets, dune crickets, Jerusalem crickets, and the surviving Hagloidea do not have a long ovipositor due to the fact that they live near or under the ground, and they simply do not need an ovipositor, they can lay eggs in a hole anyway).
About chirping: Of all the Ensifera, crickets, mol crickets, katydids, Hagloidea make sounds, they have special surfaces on their wings (one with teeth, the other like a membrane), and when they move their wings, both of these surfaces rub against each other, making very loud
different sounds. Other Ensifera usually do not create sounds, or simply knock their bodies on the surface (for example, some katydids, raspy crickets and jerusalem crickets do this). Some weta and katydids can rub their feet against the abdomen or the edges of their wings, the sounds are quiet and serve solely to scare off predators.
The auditory organs of Ensifera are located on the lower legs of the forelegs, but not all of them have them.
Ensifera can be very different in nature - cowardly, cautious, timid, mimicking, aggressive, very ferocious and cruel predators, and so on.
Ensifera are more ancient. Ensifera males leave spermatophores on the bellies of females. which is easy to see.
I wrote all this myself, and where I put it simplified. Katydid and grasshopper are different insects, there is no need to confuse them. Both belong to different sub-orders, which follow their own different paths.
@Katydid.S 💀
Where is the grasshopper? I see only a bush cricket or katydid, and a praying mantis in the video.
Grasshopper War Thanks for sharing this great video
Grasshopper said not this time
that was a WWE smackdown
Боевая ничья. Ну хоть никто никого не сожрал, уже хорошо.
pls dont kill insecck
Animal cruelty at its finest
Kinda inhumane. Even if they are just insects.