Wildlife

Eat, Prey, Love: Fast Facts on the Remarkable Praying Mantis

September 1, 2020

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closeup of green mantis insect
Chinese praying mantis, Lincoln Creek Prairie, Aurora, Nebraska. © Chris Helzer/TNC

My purple coneflowers are crunchy and tipping onto my front porch steps, dropping seeds as they die. It's time for a trim, but as I bend down to cut the dry stems, I find myself eye-to-eye with a bug in praying stance. Perhaps "preying" would be more accurate.

It's a praying mantis looking for lunch in an evergreen bush. I pull the pruners, and my fingers, out of reach and watch the insect hunt.

"They're really good hunters," says Jenny Read, Vision Science Professor at Newcastle University in England. "I always think about how terrifying it would be to be a cricket when a mantis is around."

The mantis I'm watching uses one ear and two 3-D eyes to search my yard for food and mates. It's eager for both in the fall, sometimes at the same time.

There are more than 2,400 species of mantises on earth. They all have long forearms (the better to grab prey), that often are folded when at rest. Many cultures have attributed mythical powers to praying mantis. And it turns out, mantises do have plenty of surprises in store.

closeup of brown mantis insect
A female mantid at Lincoln Creek Prairie, Aurora, Nebraska. © Chris Helzer/TNC

Ear

A praying mantis is about six inches long. Much of that length is its long stick-figured body. The bug's front legs are often folded in pre-strike position, which ironically looks a lot like praying, thus the name.

Get past those commanding pinchers and you'll find its ear. What it hears with isn't on its head. A mantis hears with an ear that's hidden on its chest. And what it hears is beyond our range.

A mantis can hear ultrasonic pulses from bats that use echolocation to locate prey. When a bat targets a mantis for a meal, the mantis knows it by sound collected in its chest-centered ear and it can dive bomb away from a bat's bite midflight.

closeup of green mantis insect
A praying mantis strikes a pose while hiding among some wildflowers. © Marty Cordano

Eyes

When you switch the bug's position from prey to predator, the eyes have it. Praying mantises have two large eyes. That's not unusual for many insects. What is unusual is placement. Mantis eyes are on the same plane and forward facing on its face, like humans. This is unique in the insect world. Even more unique is the way a mantis uses eye placement to its advantage on a head that swivels 180 degrees.

To study mantis vision compared to human vision, scientists at England's Newcastle University used beeswax to attach mini 3-D glasses to mantises. One lens filtered for blue, the other for green.

Our brain perceives depth by matching images sent from each eye. It's called stereo vision. If those images don't match, we see a blurry object. If those images don't match in front of a mantis, it doesn't care as long as there's movement. Its depth perception is based on movement rather than matching images. That's why a mantis pinches prey accurately and quickly. It's ignoring all other factors and zeroing in on movement.

"Mantises don't have many photoreceptors," Read says. "It's better to think of their images as blocky or pixelated rather than blurred."

A praying mantis sees one thing moving in the crowd rather than the whole crowd moving and it targets that one thing as soon as it moves. Translating this visionary advancement beyond bugs could make simple robots more complex in the way they mechanically work in our world.

For example, the floor sweeper that senses an upcoming wall and knows when to turn so it doesn't run into the wall. Or how far to extend a robotic arm to pick something up. That's mechanical depth perception. Studying mantis behavior helps improve that.

mantis insect eating moth
A male praying mantis feeding on a sphinx moth. © Chris Helzer/TNC

The Fishing Mantis

Zeroing in on movement makes a mantis an efficient eater and a deadly lover. From hoppers to birds, this bug eats well and well beyond what we expect.

A researcher in India surprised the world last fall with a fishing mantis. Rajesh Puttaswamaiah documented a mantis on a lily pad in the small pond in his garden. The mantis used the lily pad as its hunting platform while fishing for guppies. It caught and ate nine guppies in five days.

"They're amazing," Read says. "They've achieved complicated behavior with such a tiny brain."

Food is a major motivator for mantises in the fall. They're on the prowl for prey as their one-year life winds down. They're also looking for mates, sometimes in desperate fashion. Famously, females have been recorded eating males during mating, although recent research indicates that happens less frequently than lore suggests.