Puneet Varma (Editor)

Sandgroper (insect)

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Kingdom
  
Phylum
  
Rank
  
Family

Scientific name
  
Cylindrachetidae

Higher classification
  
Order
  
Orthoptera

Sandgroper (insect) museumwagovausitesdefaultfilesimagecachewa

Similar
  
Tridactylidae, Tridactyloidea, Eumastacoidea, Pneumoridae, Eumastacidae

Sandgropers are wholly subterranean larviform insects of the family Cylindrachetidae that may grow up to 7 cm (3 in) long. Three genera are currently recognised: Cylindracheta, Cylindraustralia and Cylindroryctes. Like many subterranean animals, little is known about their habits and diet, but Western Australian farmers have blamed them for substantial crop losses.

Contents

Sandgroper (insect) SAND GROPERS Western Australia

Sandgropers were once thought to be degenerate mole crickets, but they are now known to be more closely related to grasshoppers and locusts, and have been given their own family.

Sandgroper (insect) Diagnosing sandgropers Department of Agriculture and Food

Although widely believed to be herbivorous, some have been found with animal remains in their gut.

Range

Sandgroper (insect) SAND GROPERS Western Australia

  • Australia:
  • Cylindracheta is found only in the Northern Territory
  • Cylindraustralia widely except in the south-east and Tasmania
  • six species have been recorded in Western Australia of which five are believed to be endemic to that state. C. kochii and C. tindalei are found in the Perth region.
  • New Guinea:
  • Cylindraustralia
  • Argentina:
  • Cylindroryctes
  • Sandgroper (insect) Mole Cricket Underground Insect Not a Sandgroper YouTube

    In the 1970s, television station TVW Channel 7 in Perth, Western Australia released a stuffed toy sandgroper for sale named "Sunny The Sandgroper", with proceeds going towards Telethon. "Sunny Sandgroper" was then used as a regular character, along with Fat Cat and Percy P Penguin, in TVW-7's 'Earlybirds' morning children's show. West Australians have been known colloquially as sandgropers, with references to the name being found as early as the 1890s.

    References

    Sandgroper (insect) Wikipedia