A glimpse at the very rare Leichhardt Grasshopper from Arnhem Land, Northern Territory Australia, plus PhotoShelter update...more than 4500 images are now available in high resolution in my PhotoShelter Archive...
During my frequent travel in the Northern Territory between 1974 and 1986 I came across this amazing Grasshoppers one morning sitting on a small bush, only a few feet away from my camping ground.
© Gunther Deichmann - the rare and very unique
Leichhardt Grasshopper from Arnhem Land in the
Northern Territory of Australia, found nowhere else
in the world. Visit Gunther Deichmann website
@
www.deichmann-photo.com
or click on the image
above.
I was very deep inside Arnhem Land and in Aboriginal
Territory, I had heard about this amazing Grasshopper
before and had seen a specimen at the Darwin Museum
(the only one) and now I was confronted with these
rare creatures sitting sluggish on a bush right in
front of me. I understand the Aboriginals a lot
better now, the Dream TIme and myth, I can imagine
when they saw this orange colored Grasshopper for the
first time, how Alien this must have been.
I was told by the Curator of the Darwin Museum that
this Grasshopper had not been seen for some 100
years, I did collect a specimen for the Darwin Museum
for Research purpose. All the other ones which where
clinging on this bush I left where I found them, but
of course took some Photos first, I might never see
them again.
The Leichhardt Grasshopper is only found in the
Northern Territory, Australia.
Another endangered
species?
See below some more info and excerpts
courtesy of:
http://www.abc.net.au/cgi-bin/common/printfriendly.pl?/
science/scribblygum/November2000/default.htm
It's
named after the explorer, Ludwig Leichhardt who
reported great numbers of them as he crossed the
Arnhem Land plateau in 1845. However, after a few
more sightings, Leichhardt's Grasshopper went
incognito for 120 years. It's only reappeared on the
scientific record recently, around 1973, when the
mining industry boomed and access into Leichhardt's
grasshopper territory was improved.
In Australia's Top End a
beguiling grasshopper is heralding the coming of the
wet season by putting on its gaudiest outfit.
Leichhardt's Grasshopper is out in full adult glory.
It's Australia's most brightly coloured grasshopper
and one of the most spectacular in the world.
Leichhardt's Grasshopper is bright red, blue and
orange. Its strong colours are a defence against
predators which works so well that this little
grasshopper has Attitude - often it doesn't even
bother to fly away when predators approach.
Leichhardt's
Grasshopper's scientific name is Petasida
ephippigera. Grasshoppers come from the group of
insects known as Orthoptera, which includes crickets,
locusts and grasshoppers.
Jawoyn and Gundjeibmi people of Western Arnhem Land
call the grasshopper Alyurr, children of the
Lightning Man Namarrgon, a powerful ancestral being.
Catching sight of these grasshoppers requires a bit
of effort and some patience. Most sites are
accessible only by foot more than a day's walk from
any roads. Even then it may not be worth it. Numbers
fluctuate so greatly that grasshoppers may only be
around one year in three.
This remoteness has made Leichhardt's Grasshopper
difficult to study and also to protect. Even though
it is quite rare, the grasshopper isn't able to be
covered by Endangered Species Legislation because we
don't fully understand its basic distribution,
biology and ecology.For more info and some of the
interesting Aboriginal
legends go to:
http://www.abc.net.au/cgi-bin/common/printfriendly.pl?/
science/scribblygum/November2000/default.htm
We
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The PhotoShelter Collection is not available anymore,
however I have “JUICED”
up my
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Archives, now with over
4500
high res. images from more than 25 Countries and many
other commercial subjects.

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