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There are no known stinging orthopterans but many have chemical mechanisms in the form of glands that produce irritating fluids or repugnant odours. The disagreeable smell of some cockroaches, especially when disturbed, is well known. Examples are several species of Eurycotis in Florida and tropical America; both sexes have a large gland in the hind part of the abdomen between the sixth and seventh segments. An acidic, milky fluid consisting of several chemical constituents is emitted either as an oozing liquid or as a three-foot spray. Another cockroach (Diploptera) has a defense gland that ejects a mixture of quinones from the second abdominal spiracles. Ants, beetles, and other predators become confused and avoid these cockroaches when they release their secretions; however, certain mantid predators are not affected.

Man may handle most walking sticks safely, but a large, heavily bodied species in the southeastern U.S. (Anisomorpha buprestoides) sometimes forcibly ejects a milky fluid that is extremely irritating if introduced into the human eye. This species has a pair of circular pores on the thorax leading to reservoirs of the fluid; each reservoir has circular muscles that permit ejection of fluid without the general body contraction characteristic of some grasshoppers. When handled, most grasshoppers and some other orthopterans regurgitate from the mouth a brown fluid that superficially resembles molasses. Release of the fluid from the forward part of the alimentary canal is triggered by a response of the nervous system to pressure on certain parts of the body, especially the sides of the thorax or the femurs. Some grasshoppers have other defense mechanisms (e.g., some exude fluid through spiracles or from special glands opening on the body or even leg joints). Sometimes hissing sounds and blowing of bubbles from spiracles accompany secretion.

Physiology and biochemistry

Body composition

Several grasshopper species have been analyzed chemically. They consist of (by dry weight) roughly 50 percent to 75 percent crude protein, 4 percent to 18 percent fats, 4 percent to 16 percent carbohydrates, and 3 percent to 19 percent ash.

The tough and usually hard outer body wall (exoskeleton) of orthopterans is called the integument or cuticle; its most important component is chitin, a stable polysaccharide chemically similar to plant cellulose. Chitin makes the cuticle strong and flexible but does not provide rigidity. Sclerotin, the horny substance of the cuticle formed by a tanning-like process involving protein produced in the exoskeleton, is found in hard body plates (sclerites), leg spurs, and sharp tubercles; sclerotin is responsible for the rigidity of these structures. A heavily “sclerotized” cuticle is one that is hard and usually dark-coloured.

Hormones

The importance of hormones in the biology of orthopterans has been revealed by research. Together with the related pheromones, which tend to coordinate individuals within the population of a species instead of regulating function within an individual, hormones are important in many activities of orthopterans related to mating and reproduction. Other activities involving hormones in grasshoppers include control of fat accumulation in metabolism, control of peristalsis in the malpighian tubules (excretory organs attached to the posterior part of the alimentary canal), secretion of an enzyme at hatching time for dissolving the cuticle that encloses the embryo, and control of the number of molts in nymphal growth.

Detailed studies on the reproduction of cockroaches have disclosed an interrelated series of neurological and glandular functions that combine to control mating and egg production. Frequently, dorsal abdominal glands of the male aid in attracting the female to a mating position. In several cases, once a female has mated and an ootheca is being carried, mechanical pressure of the ootheca causes a stimulation to be transmitted to glandular bodies closely associated with the cerebral ganglia and called corpora allata; this in turn inhibits development of additional eggs in the ovarioles until laying and subsequent removal of pressure occur. In other cases, virgin females are receptive to mating just when yolk deposition is occurring in the first oocytes of developing eggs. Following mating, the mechanical stimulation of the inserted spermatophore inhibits further attraction of the female to the male abdominal glands until after the first group of eggs is deposited.

Locust is a common name for several species of short-horned grasshoppers that often increase suddenly in numbers and undertake mass migration. A locust has both solitary and gregarious phases. Gregarious locusts outnumber solitary ones, migrate both as nymphs and adults, and travel in swarms. Swarming adults are tremendously destructive to crops. Typically, gregarious locusts have darker bodies and longer wings compared with solitary forms. Colour changes in adults are correlated with maturation of reproductive organs.

Hormones and pheromones are involved in many stages of locust development. Solitary locusts can transform into gregarious ones as a result of hormonal changes induced by crowding. The presence of mature male locusts under conditions of crowding stimulates a maturation hormone that causes females to mature rapidly. Head glands in the female are stimulated to release another hormone that speeds egg maturation. A favourable season followed by an unfavourable one may cause gregarious locusts to develop. In a favourable season with enough food, the population of solitary locusts increases. If the next season is a poor one, the solitary locusts are forced to crowd together where food is available. Crowding exposes the females to male secretions, females and their eggs respond by maturing rapidly, a population explosion occurs, and a locust horde results. In Schistocerca gregaria, the attainment of reproductive activity is sometimes synchronized with environmental contact with certain aromatic shrubs that produce terpenoids in season.