Mantis religiosa: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<i>This page is all up-to-date. No further observations.</i> | |||
== About == | == About == | ||
The <b>European Mantis</b> is the only species of mantis native to and observed in Middle and Eastern Europe. | [[File:Mantis religiosa 01.jpg|thumb|A brown European Mantis waiting for prey]] | ||
The <b>European Mantis</b> is the only species of mantis native to and observed in Middle and Eastern Europe. It used to be a common species in warm regions and has moved further North over the last thirty years. While it has been observed all around Germany since around the late 1990s, it is still a rare sight in many regions. With up to 8cm in body length, they are the largest insect in the area. | |||
== Sam says == | |||
I heard about someone seeing a few specimens of <i>religiosa</i> in a fallow in Leipzig, Grünau, in late summer 2025 but never found the time, to check that place out. While I had given up on finding one for the first time that year, I walked into the whole river meadow being covered in them one day mid September. Dozens of the large mantids hung from grass blades upside down in the evening sun, not bothered by me, by the camera or anything at all. All of them were fully grown and probably out to mate. Later that year in October, I found a few of the characteristically large oothecs near the ground in the same spot. Unfortunately the city decided to mow all of them down just days later. | |||
< | == Slideshow == | ||
</ | <gallery mode=slideshow> | ||
File:Mantis_religiosa_11.jpg | |||
File:Mantis_religiosa_12.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 01.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 02.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 03.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 04.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 05.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 06.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 07.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 08.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 09.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 10.jpg | |||
</gallery> | |||
== Observations == | == Observations == | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
File:Mantis_religiosa_11.jpg | |||
File:Mantis_religiosa_12.jpg | |||
File:Mantis religiosa 01.jpg | File:Mantis religiosa 01.jpg | ||
File:Mantis religiosa 02.jpg | File:Mantis religiosa 02.jpg | ||
| Line 23: | Line 43: | ||
File:Mantis religiosa 09.jpg | File:Mantis religiosa 09.jpg | ||
File:Mantis religiosa 10.jpg | File:Mantis religiosa 10.jpg | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
[[Category:Mantis]] | [[Category:Mantis]] | ||
Latest revision as of 16:26, 19 May 2026
This page is all up-to-date. No further observations.
About

The European Mantis is the only species of mantis native to and observed in Middle and Eastern Europe. It used to be a common species in warm regions and has moved further North over the last thirty years. While it has been observed all around Germany since around the late 1990s, it is still a rare sight in many regions. With up to 8cm in body length, they are the largest insect in the area.
Sam says
I heard about someone seeing a few specimens of religiosa in a fallow in Leipzig, Grünau, in late summer 2025 but never found the time, to check that place out. While I had given up on finding one for the first time that year, I walked into the whole river meadow being covered in them one day mid September. Dozens of the large mantids hung from grass blades upside down in the evening sun, not bothered by me, by the camera or anything at all. All of them were fully grown and probably out to mate. Later that year in October, I found a few of the characteristically large oothecs near the ground in the same spot. Unfortunately the city decided to mow all of them down just days later.
