Walkingstick (Family Heteronemiidae) – Field Station

4.7 (233) · $ 21.00 · In stock

Shy and nocturnal, Walkingsticks graze on leaves of forest trees and, during a population boom, can damage them. There are two reasons for camouflage—to hide and to hunt. Turns out that despite one of Mother Nature’s better camouflage jobs, many predators aren’t fooled; walkingsticks are spotted and eaten by a variety of songbirds, rodents and mantises.

Grzimek's Encyclopedia 2nd Ed. - Vol. 3 - Insects by mike jons - Issuu

Common Walking Stick Insects (Family Diapheromeridae) · iNaturalist

Toronto Wildlife - Walkingsticks

Northern Walkingstick (Putnam County Site Observations - Primitive Insect Orders) · iNaturalist

Common walkingstick - Wikipedia

Maryland Biodiversity Project - Northern Walkingstick (Diapheromera femorata)

Heteronemiidae - Wikipedia

Description of the female, egg and first instar nymph of the stick insect Paraphasma paulense (Phasmatodea: Pseudophasmatidae) from Southeast Brazil

PDF) The types of Phasmida in the Natural History Museum, London, UK