| Cockroaches - Order BlattodeaThis page contains pictures and information about Cockroaches that we found in the Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia.
Cockroaches are classified as order Blattodea. Most of them are beautiful insects although this perception is always outweighed by their name "cockroaches". They have long spiny legs, their antennae are longer than their body. Their body is usually flat and broad so that they can squeeze into very tight places. Adults may or may not have wings. If they have, the wings are membranous with toughened forewings which overlap left over right. The head is small and pointing downwards, concealed under the pronotum. So sometime their thorax are miss-considered as their big heads. Most cockroach adults have wings but some species are wingless. Some species the males are winded but females are wingless. For the winged species, they can fly although not very often. Instead all cockroaches are very good runners. Most of them are active at night although some are active during the day time. Cockroaches are scavengers, they feed on almost everything. Some species eat wood and digest cellulose with symbiotic bacteria in their gut. They develop in in-complete metamorphosis. The eggs are laid in ootheca, or the egg sac, which sometime seen attached to the end of the female abdomen. Some cockroaches give birth to live young. A few species of cockroaches have given the group a bad name. They transmitted diseases when they occur in house and restaurants. They can contaminate food and must be controlled. Classification :There are five families of cockroaches and three of them are common in Australia. Up to now we only found three families. Superfamily BLATTOIDEA
Superfamily BLABEROIDEA
|
See us in our Home page. Download large pictures in our
Wallpaper
web page. Give us comments in our Guest
Book, or send email
to us. A great way to support
us is to buy the CD from us.
|