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Rainbow grasshopper, first described by Toussaint de Charpentier, in 1843.

tinkercreek 8 Aug 31
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8 comments

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0

wow thats real?!

2

I have never seen one of those before. Amazing.

0

Color is often adapted to environment for camouflage and protection. Ornate ornamentation is using adapted for attracting a mate. Since with coloration like that, he's definitely not hiding. I wonder how he's getting along in the love department. Lol

It also signals an unsavory meal!

@tinkercreek

True as well.

0

More examples of evolution but idiot bible liars want school children to believe alleged baby gawd geebush jeehobah ghostholes "created" diversity 4004 bce

2

Out of curiosity indigenous to where? 🤔 and on a less serious note I've also seen boxcars that kind of look like that.😁

Indigenous throughout the western Great Plains of the United States (and southern Canada), southward to Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and into northern Mexico. [jstor.org]

@AnonySchmoose thank you! 😀

0

Wow,common?

bobwjr Level 10 Aug 31, 2019

I'm thinking not so much, since no one seems to have seen one, including myself!

1

that is stunningly beautiful ... as grasshoppers go

0

Wow! Isn't this one vary rare?

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