The praying mantis is an impressive predator, especially when it’s a Chinese mantis the length of a ball point pen. The ones who live around here seem to have a particular affinity for sphinx moths. I haven’t yet watched the capture take place, but I’ve seen the mantises (mantes? mantids? critters?) devouring their fuzzy prey several times, including one I photographed last year. Almost exactly a year later, I took the following photos at the same prairie.
You can see from the photo how well this mantis can hide – it is exactly the same color as the pitcher sage (Salvia azurea) plant it was hunting on, and its shape and texture blend in perfectly. Other mantis species around the world have even more sophisticated camouflage, which almost seems unfair.
After watching the mantis for a little while, I decided to try out the video function on my camera. I’ve been trying to do a little more video work lately anyway. If you’ve always wanted to see watch a mantis eat up close – and who wouldn’t want to?? – here’s your chance. The barking in the background is from the dogs in the nearby animal shelter who were apparently excited to watch a prairie ecologist take video of a praying mantis…
My favorite shot of the day was this last one. There is sure a lot of personality in a mantis face…
Chinese mantises are, of course, not native to the U.S., but as far as I can tell from bug-smart friends, don’t seem to be having any major negative impacts (neither are they providing the kind of “pest control” they are often introduced to provide). Some introduced species have certainly become major ecological disasters, but it seems the Chinese mantis is just a new predator for prairie insects to watch out for, and for prairie enthusiasts to enjoy watching.
(Now would be the appropriate time for entomologically-savvy readers to correct my ignorance on the topic of the Chinese mantis and its impacts. Please do.)