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Mantises are an order ( Mantodea) of that contains over 2,400 species in about 460 genera in 33 families. The largest family is the ("mantids"). Mantises are distributed worldwide in and habitats. They have triangular heads with bulging eyes supported on flexible necks. Their elongated bodies may or may not have wings, but all mantodeans have forelegs that are greatly enlarged and adapted for catching and gripping prey; their upright posture, while remaining stationary with forearms folded, resembling a praying posture, has led to the common name praying mantis.

The closest relatives of mantises are and (), which are all within the . Mantises are sometimes confused with stick insects (), other elongated insects such as (), or other more distantly related insects with forelegs such as mantisflies (). Mantises are mostly , but a few ground-dwelling species are found actively pursuing their prey. They normally live for about a year. In cooler climates, the adults lay eggs in autumn, then die. The eggs are protected by their hard capsules and hatch in the spring. Females sometimes practice sexual cannibalism, eating their mates after copulation.

Mantises were considered to have supernatural powers by early civilizations, including , , and . A cultural trope popular in imagines the female mantis as a . Mantises are among the insects most commonly kept as .


Etymology
The name mantodea is formed from the Ancient Greek words μάντις]] ( mantis) meaning "prophet", and εἶδος]] ( eidos) meaning "form" or "type". It was coined in 1838 by the German entomologist Hermann Burmeister. The name "mantid" properly refers only to members of the family , which was, historically, the only family in the order. The other common name, praying mantis, applied to any species in the order (though in Europe mainly to ), comes from the typical -like posture these mantises adopt when their forelegs are folded. The vernacular plural "mantises" (used in this article) was confined largely to the US, with "mantids" predominantly used as the plural in the UK and elsewhere, until the family Mantidae was further split in 2002; at present, only some 80 out of 430 known genera are mantids, the rest are in other families.Bragg, P. E. (1996). "Mantis, Mantid, Mantids, Mantises". Mantis Study Group Newsletter, 1:4.Ehrmann, R. 2002. Mantodea: Gottesanbeterinnen der Welt. Natur und Tier, Münster.


Taxonomy and evolution
Over 2,400 species of mantis in about 430 genera are recognized. They are predominantly found in tropical regions, but some live in temperate areas.
(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .
The of mantises have long been disputed. Mantises, along with stick insects (), were once placed in the order with the cockroaches (now ) and ice crawlers (now ). Kristensen (1991) combined the Mantodea with the cockroaches and into the order , suborder Mantodea.
(2025). 9780674021631, Harvard University Press. .
(2025). 9781402062421, Springer. .


Phylogeny

External
Evolutionary relationships based on Evangelista et al. 2019 are shown in the :


Internal
One of the earliest classifications splitting an all-inclusive Mantidae into multiple families was that proposed by Beier in 1968, recognizing eight families, though it was not until Ehrmann's reclassification into 15 families in 2002 that a multiple-family classification became universally adopted. Klass, in 1997, studied the external male genitalia and postulated that the families and diverged from the other families at an early date.
(1997). 9783925382451, Zoologisches Forschungsinstitut. .
However, as previously configured, the and especially were considered ,
(2025). 9781139467766, Cambridge University Press. .
so the Mantodea have been revised substantially as of 2019 and now includes 29 families. Schwarz CJ, Roy R (2019) The systematics of Mantodea revisited: an updated classification incorporating multiple data sources (Insecta: Dictyoptera) Annales de la Société entomologique de France (N.S.) International Journal of Entomology 55 [2]: 101–196.


Fossil mantises
Mantises are thought to have evolved from cockroach-like ancestors. Some of the earliest confidently identified mantis fossils date to the , although the Jurassic taxon was identified in 2024 from the Karabastau Formation. Fossils of the group are rare: by 2022, 37 fossil species are known. Fossil mantises, including one from Japan with spines on the front legs as in modern mantises, have been found in amber. Most fossils in amber are nymphs; compression fossils (in rock) include adults. Fossil mantises from the in Brazil include the long , described in 2003; as in modern mantises, the front legs were adapted for catching prey. Well-preserved specimens yield details as small as 5 μm through X-ray computed tomography. Extinct families and genera include:


Similar insects in the
Because of the superficially similar , may be confused with mantises, though they are unrelated. Their similarity is an example of convergent evolution; mantidflies do not have (leathery forewings) like mantises, their antennae are shorter and less thread-like, and the raptorial tibia is more muscular than that of a similar-sized mantis and bends back farther in preparation for shooting out to grasp prey.


Biology

Anatomy
Mantises have large, triangular heads with a beak-like snout and mandibles. They have two bulbous , three small simple eyes, and a pair of antennae. The articulation of the neck is also remarkably flexible; some species of mantis can rotate their heads nearly 180°. The mantis thorax consists of a , a , and a . In all species apart from the genus , the prothorax, which bears the head and forelegs, is much longer than the other two thoracic segments. The prothorax is also flexibly articulated, allowing for a wide range of movements of the head and fore limbs while the remainder of the body remains more or less immobile.
(2025). 9781405337311, Dorling Kindersley. .
Mantises also are unique to the in that they have tympanate hearing, with two tympana in an auditory chamber in their metathorax. Most mantises can only hear .

Mantises have two spiked, grasping forelegs ("raptorial legs") in which prey items are caught and held securely. In most insect legs, including the posterior four legs of a mantis, the coxa and trochanter combine as an inconspicuous base of the leg; in the raptorial legs, however, the coxa and trochanter combine to form a segment about as long as the femur, which is a spiky part of the grasping apparatus (see illustration). Located at the base of the femur is a set of discoidal spines, usually four in number, but ranging from none to as many as five depending on the species. These spines are preceded by a number of tooth-like tubercles, which, along with a similar series of tubercles along the tibia and the apical claw near its tip, give the foreleg of the mantis its grasp on its prey. The foreleg ends in a delicate used as a walking appendage, made of four or five segments and ending in a two-toed claw with no .

(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .

Mantises can be loosely categorized as being macropterous (long-winged), brachypterous (short-winged), micropterous (vestigial-winged), or apterous (wingless). If not wingless, a mantis has two sets of wings: the outer wings, or , are usually narrow and leathery. They function as camouflage and as a shield for the hindwings, which are clearer and more delicate. The abdomen of all mantises consists of 10 , with a corresponding set of nine visible in males and seven visible in females. The abdomen tends to be slimmer in males than females, but ends in a pair of in both sexes.


Vision
Mantises have . They locate their prey by sight; their compound eyes contain up to 10,000 . A small area at the front called the fovea has greater visual acuity than the rest of the eye, and can produce the high resolution necessary to examine potential prey. The peripheral ommatidia are concerned with perceiving motion; when a moving object is noticed, the head is rapidly rotated to bring the object into the visual field of the fovea. Further motions of the prey are then tracked by movements of the mantis's head so as to keep the image centered on the fovea.
(1999). 9780521627269, Cambridge University Press. .
The use of stereoscopic vision differs from humans or primates because they specifically utilize this vision for capturing and spotting prey. The eyes are widely spaced and laterally situated, affording a wide and precise stereoscopic vision at close range.
(1995). 9780195084764, Oxford University Press. .
The dark spot on each eye that moves as it rotates its head is a . This occurs because the ommatidia that are viewed "head-on" absorb the , while those to the side reflect it.

As their hunting relies heavily on vision, mantises are primarily . Many species, however, fly at night and may then be attracted to artificial lights. They have good night vision. Male mantises in the family are more frequently collected at night, suggesting greater nocturnal activity or attraction to light sources. This pattern likely extends to other mantis families, where males are also more commonly observed during nighttime surveys. Nocturnal flight is especially important to males in locating less-mobile females by detecting their . Flying at night exposes mantises to fewer bird predators than diurnal flight would. Many mantises also have an auditory thoracic organ that helps them avoid bats by detecting their echolocation calls and responding evasively.

(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .
(2025). 9780521821490, Cambridge University Press. .


Diet and hunting
Mantises are generalist of . The majority of mantises are that only feed upon live prey within their reach. They either camouflage themselves and remain stationary, waiting for prey to approach, or stalk their prey with slow, stealthy movements. Larger mantises sometimes eat smaller individuals of their own species,
(2025). 9781402062421, Springer. .
as well as small vertebrates such as lizards, frogs, fish, and particularly small birds.
(2025). 9780521821490, Cambridge University Press. .

Most mantises stalk tempting prey if it strays close enough, and will go further when they are especially hungry. Once within reach, mantises strike rapidly to grasp the prey with their spiked raptorial forelegs. Some ground and bark species pursue their prey in a more active way. For example, members of a few genera such as the ground mantises Entella, Ligaria, and Ligariella run over dry ground seeking prey, much as do. Some mantis species such as Euantissa pulchra can discriminate between different types of prey, and approached spiders mimicking non-aggressive ant species much more than spiders that mimicked aggressive ant species.

The fore gut of some species extends the whole length of the insect and can be used to store prey for digestion later. This may be advantageous in an insect that feeds intermittently.

(2025). 9781402062421, Springer. .
live longer, grow faster, and produce more young when they are able to eat .


Antipredator adaptations
Mantises are preyed on by vertebrates such as frogs, lizards, and birds, and by invertebrates such as spiders, large species of hornets, and ants. Some hunting wasps, such as some species of , also paralyze some species of mantis to feed their young. Generally, mantises protect themselves by camouflage, most species being cryptically colored to resemble or other backgrounds, both to avoid predators and to better snare their prey.
(2025). 9781118846162, Wiley. .
Those that live on uniformly colored surfaces such as bare earth or tree bark are dorsoventrally flattened so as to eliminate shadows that might reveal their presence.
(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .
The species from different families called are aggressive mimics: they resemble flowers convincingly enough to attract prey that come to collect pollen and nectar. Some species in Africa and Australia are able to turn black after a molt towards the end of the dry season; at this time of year, bush fires occur and this coloration enables them to blend in with the fire-ravaged landscape (fire melanism).

When directly threatened, many mantis species stand tall and spread their forelegs, with their wings fanning out wide. The fanning of the wings makes the mantis seem larger and more threatening, with some species enhancing this effect with bright colors and patterns on their hindwings and inner surfaces of their front legs. If harassment persists, a mantis may strike with its forelegs and attempt to pinch or bite. As part of the bluffing () , some species may also produce a hissing sound by expelling air from the abdominal spiracles. Mantises lack chemical protection, so their displays are largely bluff. When flying at night, at least some mantises are able to detect the echolocation sounds produced by bats; when the frequency begins to increase rapidly, indicating an approaching bat, they stop flying horizontally and begin a descending spiral toward the safety of the ground, often preceded by an aerial loop or spin. If caught, they may slash captors with their raptorial legs.

Mantises, like , show rocking behavior in which the insect makes rhythmic, repetitive side-to-side movements. Functions proposed for this behavior include the enhancement of by means of the resemblance to vegetation moving in the wind. However, the repetitive swaying movements may be most important in allowing the insects to discriminate objects from the background by their relative movement, a visual mechanism typical of animals with simpler sight systems. Rocking movements by these generally sedentary insects may replace flying or running as a source of relative motion of objects in the visual field. As ants may be predators of mantises, genera such as , , and , like many other arthropods, avoid attacking them. A variety of arthropods, including some early-instar mantises, exploit this behavior and mimic to evade their predators.

File:Choeradodis stalii MHNT dos.jpg|Leaf : has leaf-like forewings and a widened green thorax. File:Gottesanbeterin Abwehr.JPG|Adult female performs a bluffing , rearing back with the forelegs and wings spread and mouth opened. File:Gemmatus.jpg|The jeweled flower mantis, Creobroter gemmatus: the brightly colored wings are opened suddenly in a to startle predators. File:Ant-Mantis.jpg|Some mantis nymphs to avoid predators. File:Schizocephala bicornis, Grass Mantis, Udaipur.jpg|The grass mantis Schizocephala bicornis mimics dry grass to both avoid predators and to approach unwitting prey


Reproduction and life history
The mating season in temperate climates typically takes place in autumn, while in tropical areas, mating can occur at any time of the year.
(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .
To mate following courtship, the male usually leaps onto the female's back, clasping her thorax and wing bases with his forelegs. He then arches his abdomen to deposit and store sperm in a special chamber near the tip of the female's abdomen. The female lays between 10 and 400 eggs, depending on the species. Eggs are typically deposited in a froth mass-produced by in the abdomen. This froth hardens, creating a protective capsule, which together with the egg mass is called an . Depending on the species, the ootheca can be attached to a flat surface, wrapped around a plant, or even deposited in the ground. Despite the versatility and durability of the eggs, they are often preyed on, especially by several species of . In a few species, mostly ground and bark mantises in the family , the mother guards the eggs. The cryptic Tarachodes maurus positions herself on bark with her abdomen covering her egg capsule, ambushing passing prey and moving very little until the eggs hatch. An unusual reproductive strategy is adopted by Brunner's stick mantis from the southern United States: no males have ever been found in this species, and the females breed parthenogenetically. The ability to reproduce by parthenogenesis has been recorded in at least two other species, Sphodromantis viridis and sp., although these species usually reproduce sexually.Bragg, P.E. (1987) A case of parthenogenesis in a mantis. Bulletin of the Amateur Entomologists' Society, 46 (356): 160.Dickie, S. (1996) Parthenogenesis in mantids. Mantis Study Group Newsletter, 1: 5. In temperate climates, adults do not survive the winter and the eggs undergo a , hatching in the spring.

As in closely related insect groups in the superorder Dictyoptera, mantises go through three life stages: egg, nymph, and adult (mantises are among the insects). For smaller species, the eggs may hatch in 3–4 weeks as opposed to 4–6 weeks for larger species. The nymphs may be colored differently from the adult, and the early stages are often mimics of ants. A mantis nymph grows bigger as it its . Molting can happen five to 10 times before the adult stage is reached, depending on the species. After the final molt, most species have wings, though some species remain wingless or brachypterous ("short-winged"), particularly in the female sex. The lifespan of a mantis depends on the species; smaller ones may live 4–8 weeks, while larger species may live 4–6 months.

(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .

File:Mantis religiosa couple.JPG| mating (brown male, green female) File:Mantis laying ootheca.jpg| Stagmomantis carolina laying File:Mantis religiosa (egg case).jpg|Recently laid M. religiosa ootheca File:PrayingMantisesJustBorn (cropped).jpg|Hatching from the ootheca File:Sphodromantis Lineola molting.jpg| Sphodromantis lineola molting


Sexual cannibalism
Sexual cannibalism is common among most predatory species of mantises in captivity. It has sometimes been observed in natural populations, where about a quarter of male–female encounters result in the male being eaten by the female. Around 90% of the predatory species of mantises exhibit sexual cannibalism. Adult males typically outnumber females at first, but their numbers may be fairly equivalent later in the adult stage, possibly because females selectively eat the smaller males. In Tenodera sinensis, 83% of males escape cannibalism after an encounter with a female, but since multiple matings occur, the probability of a male's being eaten increases cumulatively.

The female may begin feeding by biting off the male's head (as they do with regular prey), and if mating has begun, the male's movements may become even more vigorous in its delivery of sperm. Early researchers thought that because copulatory movement is controlled by a in the abdomen, not the head, removal of the male's head was a reproductive strategy by females to enhance fertilization while obtaining sustenance. Later, this behavior appeared to be an artifact of intrusive laboratory observation. Whether the behavior is natural in the field or also the result of distractions caused by the human observer remains controversial. Mantises are highly visual organisms and notice any disturbance in the laboratory or field, such as bright lights or moving scientists. Chinese mantises that had been fed (so that they were not hungry) actually displayed elaborate courtship behavior when left undisturbed. The male engages the female in a courtship dance, to change her interest from feeding to mating. Under such circumstances, the female has been known to respond with a defensive deimatic display by flashing the colored eyespots on the inside of her front legs.

The reason for sexual cannibalism has been debated; experiments show that females on poor diets are likelier to engage in sexual cannibalism than those on good diets. Some hypothesize that submissive males gain a selective advantage by producing offspring; this is supported by a quantifiable increase in the duration of copulation among males which are cannibalized, in some cases doubling both the duration and the chance of fertilization. This is contrasted by a study where males were seen to approach hungry females with more caution, and were shown to remain mounted on hungry females for a longer time, indicating that males that actively avoid cannibalism may mate with multiple females. The same study also found that hungry females generally attracted fewer males than those that were well fed. The act of dismounting after copulation is dangerous for males, for it is the time that females most frequently cannibalize their mates. An increase in mounting duration appears to indicate that males wait for an opportune time to dismount a hungry female, who would be likely to cannibalize her mate. Experiments have revealed that the sex ratio in an environment determines male copulatory behavior of Mantis religiosa which in turn affects the cannibalistic tendencies of the female and support the sperm competition hypothesis because the polyandrous treatment recorded the highest copulation duration time and lowest cannibalism. This further suggests that dismounting the female can make males susceptible to cannibalism.


Relationship with humans

In culture, literature and art
One of the earliest mantis references is in the ancient Chinese dictionary , which gives its attributes in poetry, where it represents courage and fearlessness, and a brief description. A later text, the () from 1108, gives accurate details of the construction of the egg packages, the development cycle, anatomy, and the function of the antennae. Although mantises are rarely mentioned in Ancient Greek sources, a female mantis in threat posture is accurately illustrated on a series of fifth-century BC silver coins, including , from in .
(2025). 9780199589425, Oxford University Press. .
In the 10th century AD, era Adages, describes an insect resembling a slow-moving green locust with long front legs. He translates 2.94 with the words seriphos (maybe a mantis) and graus, an old woman, implying a thin, dried-up stick of a body.
(1992). 9780802028310, University of Toronto Press. .

Mantises are a common motif in Luna Polychrome ceramics of pre-Columbian Nicaragua, and are believed to represent a deity or spirit called "Madre Culebra".

Western descriptions of the biology and morphology of the mantises became more accurate in the 18th century. Roesel von Rosenhof illustrated and described mantises and their cannibalistic behavior in the Insekten-Belustigungen ( Insect Entertainments).

In the early 1900s, people in the United States region referred to them as Devil's horses.

(2012). 9780486122960, Courier Corporation. .

made philosophical observations about the nature of death while two mantises mated in the sight of two characters in his 1962 novel Island (the species was Gongylus gongylodes). The naturalist 's humorously autobiographical 1956 book My Family and Other Animals includes a four-page account of an almost evenly matched battle between a mantis and a . Shortly before the fatal dénouement, Durrell narrates:

M. C. Escher's woodcut Dream depicts a human-sized mantis standing on a sleeping bishop.

(2025). 9783540288497, Springer. .

A cultural trope imagines the female mantis as a . The idea is propagated in cartoons by Cable, Guy and Rodd, LeLievre, T. McCracken, and Mark Parisi, among others. It ends Isabella Rossellini's short film about the life of a praying mantis in her 2008 season for the .

The Deadly Mantis is a 1957 American , with a giant mantis threatening mankind. Imdb


Martial arts
Two separately developed in China have movements and fighting strategies based on those of the mantis. As one of these arts was developed in northern China, and the other in southern parts of the country, the arts are today referred to (both in English and Chinese) as 'Northern Praying Mantis' and 'Southern Praying Mantis'.
(2025). 9780985724016, Southern Mantis Press.
Both are very popular in China, and have also been exported to the West in recent decades.


In mythology and religion
According to local beliefs in Africa, this insect brings good luck. Is a Praying Mantis Good Luck?, Reference.com, 11 April 2020 The mantis was revered by the southern African and in whose cultures man and nature were intertwined; for its praying posture, the mantis was even named Hottentotsgot ("god of the Hottentots") in the language that had developed among the first European settlers. However, at least for the San, the mantis was only one of the manifestations of a trickster-deity, ǀKaggen, who could assume many other forms, such as a snake, hare or vulture. Several ancient civilizations did consider the insect to have supernatural powers; for the Greeks, it had the ability to show lost travelers the way home; in the Book of the Dead, the "bird-fly" is a minor god that leads the souls of the dead to the underworld; in a list of 9th-century BC grasshoppers ( buru), the mantis is named ( buru-enmeli) and ( buru-enmeli-ashaga).
(1999). 9780801861741, Johns Hopkins University Press. .
Some pre-Columbian cultures in western Nicaragua have preserved oral traditions of the mantis as "Madre Culebra", a powerful predator and symbol of female symbolic authority.


As pets
Mantises are among the insects most widely kept as pets. Because the lifespan of a mantis is only about a year, people who want to keep mantises often breed them. In 2013 at least 31 species were kept and bred in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and the United States. In 1996 at least 50 species were known to be kept in captivity by members of the Mantis Study Group.Bragg, P.E. editor (1996) Species in culture. Mantis Study Group Newsletter, 1: 2–3.


For pest control
Naturally occurring mantis populations provide control. Gardeners who prefer to avoid may encourage mantises in the hope of controlling insect pests. However, mantises do not have key attributes of biological pest control agents; they do not specialize in a single pest insect, and do not multiply rapidly in response to an increase in such a prey species, but are general predators. They therefore have "negligible value" in biological control.

Two species, the Chinese mantis and the European mantis, were deliberately introduced to North America in the hope that they would serve as pest controls for agriculture; they have spread widely in both the United States and Canada.


Robotics
In 2016, the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence had produced a prototype inspired by the forelegs of the praying mantis, with front legs that allow the robot to , climb steps, and grasp objects. The multi-jointed leg provides dexterity via a rotatable joint. Future models may include a more spiked foreleg to improve the grip and ability to support more weight.


See also
  • List of Orthopteroid genera containing species recorded in Europe


External links

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