Omocestus viridulus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Common Green Grasshopper

Taxonomy: 

  • OrthopteraCaeliferaAcridoideaAcrididaeGomphocerinaeOmocestus viridulus

Status: 

UK

Distribution

Recordings

  • Courtship song, ending with mounting song.
  • Calling song. Two verses, interval between verses shortened.
  • The Common Green Grasshopper recorded with a bat detector but, as our loudest grasshopper, it is readily heard by ear.

Colours show the year of the last record -

  up to 1987   1988-97   1998 up to present

Only Recording Scheme datasets are included. Other datasets on the Gateway may hold additional information.

Open the NBN Atlas interactive map in a new window.

Description: 

Green or green and brown. There is never any red or orange on the abdomen. Females are always green dorsally though green, brown or purple elsewhere. Gently incurved side-keels on the pronotum. Palps may be pale but never chalk white.

Size: 

14-23 mm

Wings: 

Winged and flies well. In females, wings do not usually exceed the end of the body; in males they do.

Stridulation: 

Rapid, prolonged, sibilant clicking which starts quietly and rapidly increases in volume and is sustained for 10 to 20 seconds or longer.

Food: 

Herbivorous.

Habitat: 

Long grass often in damp situations and particularly old, unimproved grasslands which are not heavily grazed or mown.

Phenology: 

The first of the grasshoppers to appear in numbers, nymphs can be found from late April or May. Adults appear from July and survive into November.