- the
genus Hemideina of the
family Anostostomatidae. The
genus is
endemic to New Zealand.
There are
seven species within the
genus Hemideina, found throughout...
- than
females and they show
scramble competition for mates. Tree wētā (
Hemideina sp)
males have
larger heads than
females and a
polygynandrous mating system...
-
Hemideina cr****idens,
commonly known as the
Wellington tree wētā, is a large, flightless,
nocturnal insect in the
family Anostostomatidae. This wētā species...
-
Hemideina maori, also
known as the
mountain stone wētā, is a wētā of the
family Anostostomatidae. They are a large, flightless,
nocturnal orthopteran...
-
Hemideina ricta,
known as the
Banks Peninsula tree wētā, is an
insect that is
endemic to New Zealand.
Hemideina ricta Hutton, 1896 is a tree wētā that...
-
Hemideina thoracica,
commonly known as the
Auckland tree wētā or
tokoriro is a cricket-like
insect (within the
family Anostostomatidae). It is endemic...
-
Hemideina femorata, the
Canterbury tree weta or in Māori, ****ngatanga, is a
flightless nocturnal insect from the
order Orthoptera and the
genus Hemideina...
-
zoologist Adam
White in 1842.
William Colenso described the
species as
Hemideina gigantea in 1882; a name
which was
later brought into
synonymy with D...
-
Hemideina trewicki, the
Hawkes Bay tree wētā, is a
large arboreal long-horned
cricket in the
order Orthoptera. The
species is
endemic to New
Zealand and...
- of
North America.[citation needed] The
wetas of New Zealand, such as
Hemideina, are
mostly herbivores that feed on leaves,
fruit and flowers, but may...