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Praying mantis nymph in the osteospermum

New Zealand praying mantis (Orthodera novaezealandiae) nymph on my Osteospermum "Afrikaans Pink Spoon" (or at least I think that was the cultivar) in our garden in Christchurch, New Zealand.

 

I guess each ootheca has 20+ torpedo tubes, each launching one of these critters, so given the 5 or so groupings of nymphs I've found so far, we would have > 100 running around. While they are too small to be a threat to bees at present, they don't remain "sweet and innocent" for always.

 

I try to dissuade them since I promote a bee friendly garden, and they chomp too many for my liking - be it wild european/native bees, or the leafcutter bees I have intested in raising (some days I think I spend more on "pet lunches" keeping the mantises fat and well fed than on my own).

 

I did make a half-hearted end of season attempt to start deporting female mantises (or possibly the same one 3 times), but likely too little and too late to have any effect. As fascinating as they are to watch and photograph, I like to encourage them to go eat someone else's bugs because I want to keep (most of) mine for myself.

 

 

Cropped, but otherwise unprocessed camera jpeg.

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Uploaded on October 28, 2021
Taken on October 27, 2021