Behold, The Gargantuan Stick Insect

Only three female Ctenomorpha gargantua stick insects have ever been seen in the wild.

a large tan bug that looks like a stick clinging upside down from a hand

An adult female "Ctenomorpha gargantua" from the first captive-reared generation, measuring 56.5 cm in total length. Photo by Museum Victoria

Seeing this giant Australian stick insect species, Ctenomorpha gargantua, in the wild would be a little like hitting the jackpot.

A few males have been spotted here and there, but only three of the much-larger females—like the one pictured here—have ever been seen, according to Maik Fiedel, coordinator of live exhibits at the Museum Victoria’s Melbourne Museum.

Fiedel came across the third female two years ago. He was on an annual collection trip in Cairns with colleagues from the museum when he spotted the 50-centimeter-long insect hanging upside-down from a bush (it had probably fallen from the tree canopy). Upon realizing what it was, “I started screaming,” he says. The team collected it, and the museum dubbed it “Lady Gaga-ntuan,” a play on the American pop star and the insect’s large size.



“It was pure coincidence that we came across it, but we always have our eyes open for this species in particular, because everyone basically wants it [for their collection],” Fiedel says. Ctenomorpha gargantua is considered the longest stick insect species in Australia, and the second largest in the world. But so far, “almost nothing is known about the biology or ecology of the species in the wild,” says Fiedel.

[The fiery mountains under the sea.]

Researchers think that these stick insects spend their life high up in the tree canopies of the Australian tropics, and that could be why spying them in the wild is uncommon, Fiedel explains.

Ctenomorpha gargantua is distinctive for the fork shape of its large cerci, the leaf-shaped appendages that protrude from the end of the abdomen. “No other species in the world has got cerci that long [compared] to its body size,” Fiedel says.

Maik Fiedel holding a captive reared female Gargantuan Stick Insect, Ctenomorpha gargantua. Photo by Museum Victoria
Maik Fiedel holding a captive-reared female gargantuan stick insect. Photo by Museum Victoria

Females tend to be a third longer than males, and their cerci are particularly longer than the males’, by about four times. Males sport long wings that allow them to fly while females, bearing shorter wings, can’t take flight.

The species is also the only one known to have a certain black patch on the underside of its thorax that looks like a bullseye or a figure 8, though no one knows what its function is, according to Fiedel.

The Museum Victoria’s Lady Gaga-ntuan specimen proved even more precious when she began laying eggs soon after she was gathered from the field. This was only the second time C. gargantua eggs had ever been collected, to the best of Fiedel’s knowledge.

[The surprising life inside frozen soil.]

Lady Gaga-ntuan died after two weeks in captivity, but her 12 eggs produced seven babies, or nymphs—four females and three males (the museum suspects the mother was at the end of her natural lifespan and the other eggs weren’t viable). All of the female offspring grew to be larger than their mother, measuring 56.5 centimeters (22 inches) and breaking the record for second largest recorded stick insect in the world. (Top honors go to a Phobaeticus chani specimen, native to Borneo and currently held at the Natural History Museum in London.)

With his starter nursery, Fiedel began a captive breeding program, mating the offspring with each other after they reached maturation. Now those females have begun laying eggs.

Eggs of Ctenomorpha gargantua, held by the Museum Victoria. Photo by Museum Victoria
Eggs of “Ctenomorpha gargantua,” held by the Museum Victoria. Photo by Museum Victoria

And they’ve been laying surprisingly few. Fiedel says that more common spiny leaf stick insects usually lay 500-800 eggs over their adult lifespan, but the museum’s C. gargantua specimens have each laid perhaps a few dozen per week, though the number varies. The low output could be due to the conditions of captivity, or it could be a trait unique to the species itself. “That could explain why there’s not many animals [that have] ever been seen of this species, because they might not lay a lot of eggs,” Fiedel suggests.

For now, the museum has all its live specimens on display and is hoping to maintain a stable population in its captive breeding program. That way, it can eventually share specimens with other institutions, such as museums and zoos, around the globe so “people never ever have to take [these insects] out of the wild again,” says Fiedel.

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About Chau Tu

Chau Tu is an associate editor at Slate Plus. She was formerly Science Friday’s story producer/reporter.

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