Parcoblatta Lata
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''Parcoblatta lata'', the broad wood cockroach, is a species of wood cockroach (family
Ectobiidae Ectobiidae (formerly Blattellidae) is a family of the order Blattodea (cockroaches). This family contains many of the smaller common household pest cockroaches, among others. They are sometimes called wood cockroaches. A few notable species inclu ...
) native to the United States. It is one of the largest species of wood cockroaches.


Description

Both genders of ''P. lata'' are relatively large and robust for the genus. The male dorsal coloration of the species is a glossy light brown or reddish brown, while the female is a darker brown. The male's
tegmina A tegmen (plural: ''tegmina'') designates the modified leathery front wing on an insect particularly in the orders Dermaptera ( earwigs), Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets and similar families), Mantodea (praying mantis), Phasmatodea (stick an ...
(outer forewings) extend well beyond the abdomen, and are wider than its pronotum. The female's short tegmina end around the second dorsal segment, and are colored slightly lighter than the rest of the body. The female is wider than the male, and has a much larger, more rounded pronotum. The ootheca typically measures around , with its seam slightly curved, having a row of about 30 evenly spaced knobs.


Distribution

The distribution of the species is the Eastern United States, including Alabama, the District of Columbia, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.


Mating behavior

As with many cockroaches, the female ''Parcoblatta lata'' emits pheromones to find mates, a process termed ''calling''. It assumes a characteristic calling posture by alternately raising its body upward from the ground by bending its body longitudinally, and lowering it downward by straightening its body. ''P. lata'' produces volatile, long-distance pheromones, attracting the males which can fly to the female's location. The 12 species of the genus ''Parcoblatta'' are theorized to produce species-specific blends of pheromones, although there may be other species-isolating mechanisms of attraction such as time or location. A main component of the pheromones of ''P. lata'' is an unusual lactone, (4Z,11Z)-oxacyclotrideca-4,11-dien-2-one. Discovered in 2011 and dubbed ''Parcoblattalactone'', it is also found in other species of the genus ''Parcoblatta'', and a synthetic version has been created for use in assessing Parcoblatta populations.


Habitat and ecology

''P. lata'' commonly inhabit forests and grasslands. They are endemic to pine forests of the southeastern US, have been found in grassland and shrub communities in Kansas, and have been found only in lowlying mesic hammocks in Florida. The species has been reported indoors, at lights, and under wooden signs on trees. In an observational study of the species, it was observed to eat cambium, flower petals, and sap. A survey of insects caught by the pitcher plant '' Saracenia flava'' included male specimens of four species of ''Parcoblatta'', including ''P. lata'', leading to speculation that the winged adults may seek nectar as a source of energy for flying. It is a methanogenic (methane-producing) species, a trait more common in the cockroach families Blaberidae and Blattinae than in the family Blatellidae. The species comprises more than half the biomass of the diet of the endangered
red-cockaded woodpecker The red-cockaded woodpecker (''Leuconotopicus borealis'') is a woodpecker endemic to the southeastern United States. Description The red-cockaded woodpecker is small to mid-sized species, being intermediate in size between North America's two ...
(''Picoides borealis'').


Additional Images

File:Parcoblatta lata nymphs from NC.jpg, ''Parcoblatta lata'' nymphs File:P.virginicaandP.lataAdultMales.jpg, ''Parcoblatta virginica'' on top of a ''Parcoblatta lata''. From the head to the tip of the wings the ''Parcoblatta lata'' measured 25 millimeters long and the ''Parcoblatta virginica'' 14 millimeters long. File:Parcoblatta lata and Parcoblatta virginica adult males comparison NC.jpg, Photo showing the difference in size between ''Parcoblatta lata'' and '' Parcoblatta virginica'' adult males. File:Parcoblatta lata adult female NC.jpg, Adult female File:Parcoblatta lata adult female underside NC.jpg, Underside of adult female File:Parcoblatta lata adult females NC.jpg, A group of adult females.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Parcoblatta lata Cockroaches Insects described in 1865 Taxa named by Carl Brunner von Wattenwyl