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Thread: 2485 Insects turn cannival
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| 2485 Insects turn cannival |

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2006-06-30 23:11:03 |
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Scientists Baffled by Insects That Eat Everything in Their Path -- Including Each Other
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/DyeHard/story?id=2124982&page=1&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312
Scientists are baffled by what causes Mormon crickets in the west to swarm and cannibalize each other. (AP Photo)

June 28, 2006 -- Millions
of Mormon crickets are on the move again in the Western United States,
devouring everything in their path as they march in unison across wide
swaths of land from Idaho to Oregon.
If you're a farmer, it's an invasion from hell.
But if you're a Mormon cricket, the farmers have it easy. The
farmers aren't facing starvation, and they're not likely to get eaten
by other members of their family. But that's what it's like this time
of the year for the insects, according to new research that explains
why they engage in behaviors that are unusual, even for insects.
It turns out that the insects form huge "bands" to protect
themselves from predators, and they march across the countryside in a
desperate search for protein, according to Patrick Lorch, an insect
behaviorist at Kent State University. Although their wings are too
feeble for them to fly, they can move more than a mile in a single day,
driven partly by a fear of cannibalism.
Lorch is one of many scientists who have tried to figure out why
Mormon crickets, which aren't really crickets (they're katydids) behave
the way they do. In the high country, like the Rockies, they act like
they are supposed to act, eating other insects, mating and staying
pretty much to themselves.
But in the sagebrush-covered plains, it's a different story. They
sometimes form huge bands, numbering in the millions, with more than
100 crickets per square yard. And for reasons that have long puzzled
scientists, they march in one direction, climbing over everything in
their paths, devouring crops and creating a huge splatter of goo
whenever they cross a highway.
Why do they do that? Lorch and several other scientists addressed
that question while he was a postdoctoral researcher at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. They actually attached tiny radio
transmitters to the backs of some of the crickets so they could monitor
their behavior. The crickets are pretty large, measuring up to 2 inches
long, but they weigh only about half as much as a nickel, so even a
tiny transmitter was a heavy load. But it paid off, at least for the
scientists.
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