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Summer
1998
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED
MARCH 2002.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: SUMMER 1998.]
Prairie
walkingstick: Native grassland dweller
By
Sheryl De Vore
Childhood
forays into the woods or backyards in summer often reveal
surprises such as a twig that suddenly starts moving and
turns out to be an interesting insect called the walkingstick.
But
not all walkingsticks are the same and there's one that
you'll only find in the region's native prairies. It's called
the prairie walkingstick (Diapheromera blatchleyi).
In
1907, W.S. Blatchley, an early 20th century entomologist,
wrote that the prairie walkingstick "prefers rank prairie
vegetation and is found throughout Illinois," in the
book, Orthoptera of Northeastern America. At that
time, Blatchley was one of a handful of scientists who understood
about the true native prairie, says Ron Panzer, a biologist
at Northeastern Illinois University who is studying walkingsticks
and other insects in the region. Walkingsticks are tied
to the native mesic and wet prairies of the region. Panzer
said he's found them living in at least three places in
the Chicago Wilderness region: Illinois Beach State Park
in Lake County, Illinois, and the Indian Boundary Prairies
and the Chicago Ridge Prairie in Cook County, Illinois.
As
with all insects, a walkingstick possesses a head, thorax,
abdomen, and six legs. A walkingstick, however, has no wings.
Thus, to protect itself from predators such as birds and
mice, it uses camouflage. The walkingstick's long, thin,
bumpy body looks like a tree twig or a branch from a prairie
forb. As the prairie grasses turn from green to brown when
seasons pass from spring to autumn, the prairie walkingstick's
body color changes, too.
In
spring, a nymph hatches from overwintering eggs that resemble
tiny black seeds and have hard protective shells. The nymph
looks like a miniature adult and molts or sheds its skin
several times before reaching about four inches in length.
The adults then mate and the female lays eggs that will
overwinter, before she and the other adults die.
Little
is known about the prairie walkingstick, says Panzer. "We
don't even know how many eggs the female lays, though it's
probably at least 100," he says. "We do know that the eggs
are laid above ground," where fire would likely destroy
them. That fact presents a puzzle regarding some recent
information he has gained by studying these creatures at
Illinois Beach State Park.
Prairie
walkingsticks are "fire positive," says Panzer. That means
that fire used to restore and manage prairies has probably
increased the prairie walkingstick population. Panzer says
he thinks the prairie walkingstick is doing well in the
region because entire areas are not burned all at once.
That way overwintering eggs in an area that has not been
burned develop into young walkingsticks that seem to have
a penchant for recently burned vegetation. They just migrate
over to the rich, nutritious emerging grasses.
Panzer
is also researching a close relative, the western walkingstick
(Diapheroma velei), which feeds specifically on a
prairie legume called scurfy pea (Psoralia tenuflora).
The plant, which grows only in small numbers at a few Chicago
Wilderness sites, still thrives on hill prairies in west-central
Illinois. The western and prairie walkingsticks look extremely
similar, yet each has its own biological niche. As Panzer's
studies continue, more may be learned about the walkingsticks
that still find a place to live in our native prairies.
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