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 |  | Family MANTIDAEThis page contains information and pictures about Purplewinged Mantids that we found in the Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia.  
 Length 100mm Purplewinged
  Mantids are also known as  Australian Mantids. The adult Purplewinged Mantids are large in size with long and narrow body.
Their wings are purple to dark brown in
colour, with grass green on both edges. Their head and body are light brown
with green colour eyes.    Like all others mantids, Purplewinged Mantids have long thorax and strong
 spiny forelegs. They also have very mobile triangular shaped head with distinctive ocelli and large compound eyes.
 Their segmented antenna are medium to long in length.     Purplewinged Mantids are not hard to found in Brisbane. They can generally be seen on tree trunks and bushes or among grasses and other plants.
However, they are camouflaged to blend in with the plants and we may need some
luck to spot on them. 
 
    Nymph. length 70mm The above picture shows a Purplewinged Mantid nymph which is yellow-brown in colour with light green eyes. Its wings are
  not yet fully developed. We found it in the bush. It is hard to be noticed while
it was waiting near the flower, where we saw the butterflies were visit frequently.
We saw it while I was taking the picture (smaller photo) of a Wanderer
butterfly.   Nymph. length 70mm 
    Nymph. length 70mm Pictures taken on September in Karawatha Forest. 
  Purplewinged Mantids hatching from Ootheca
    Purplewinged Mantid Ootheca, 25mm x 15mm Early July we found the ootheca in bushland near Alexandra Hill, Brisbane.
    It was on a small Acacia tree, about 1 meter above ground. It was not
    covered by any leaves and easily be noticed.     We collected and kept the ootheca at home in a jar. Those small mantids
    came our on end July. There were about a hundred of them running around.   Purplewinged Mantid 1st instars on my finger, body length 6mm  Those Purplewinged Mantid 1st instars look exactly as their parents, with
    a purple strip on their back along the body.  The ootheca that we found were usually  infected by the Parasitic
  Wasps  (Podagrion sp.) in some degree (see my other mantid page).
    This ootheca seems did not have this problem.   
 Reference:
  1. Tenodera
    australasiae  - Australian Biological Resources Study, Department
    of the Environment and Heritage.
  2. Tenodera australasiae 
    - Australian Insect Common Names, 16 June 20053. Insects
    of Australia, CSIRO, Division of Entomology, Melbourne University
    Press, 2nd Edition 1991, pp 352, 356.4. Insects of Australia and New Zealand - R. J. Tillyard, Angus
    & Robertson, Ltd, Sydney, 1926, p93. 
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