Photo of the Day

Northern Green-striped Grasshopper
Late winter is hardly the time of year one would expect to find a grasshopper bouncing around a rocky woodland clearing.  But earlier this week during our visit to Rothrock State Forest in Huntingdon County, we photographed this Northern Green-striped Grasshopper (Chortophaga viridifasciata viridifasciata) nymph among the talus atop Tussey Mountain.  Unlike the majority of other grasshopper species in the Susquehanna basin which overwinter as eggs, the Northern Green-striped hatches in late summer and progresses through all but the final one or two of its five developmental instars before passing the colder months in a sheltered location among fallen leaves, dried grasses, and decaying plant matter.  Often the earliest of our grasshoppers to emerge, the Northern Green-striped nymph soon completes its final molts and reaches adulthood just in time for the warm days of late spring and early summer.  Two color forms are common, brown and green, both possessing reddish-brown abdominal segments.  Fuchsia-colored erythristic individuals are rare.