Calypratus
Established Member
they look like the ones pictured
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Ah, okay. Carolina locusts require a diapause, so I've never bothered with them. Since you are in NC(North Carolina?), you should have American bird grasshoppers. I recommend those. Twice as big and no diapause. They are the ones in the first picture from my previous post. The first group of the year hatches this month, so maybe you can find some soon. Nymphs are usually green. Feel free to send a picture if you ever need help ID'ing.tbh the ones I caught were light brown and I just assumed they were a carolina locust
This is incorrect. You are talking about cicadas. Locusts are grasshoppers that swarm.I assume you are talking about grasshoppers. In temperate regions, they have obligatory diapause, so there is only one generation per year.
When nymphs are crowded, they develop extra large wings, a migratory phase when they are adults.
The seventeen year locusts underground as nymphs and adjults appear at 17 year intervals. They are entirely different than grasshoppers.
I catch and feed a lot of wild locusts to my Chams, we have the bird hoppers here in south Louisiana as well. We frequently come across ones 4”+, they are so big my adult Chams can’t take them down. They are absolute monsters!Ah, okay. Carolina locusts require a diapause, so I've never bothered with them. Since you are in NC(North Carolina?), you should have American bird grasshoppers. I recommend those. Twice as big and no diapause. They are the ones in the first picture from my previous post. The first group of the year hatches this month, so maybe you can find some soon. Nymphs are usually green. Feel free to send a picture if you ever need help ID'ing.
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