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		Alpine Camel Cricket - Ceuthophilus alpinus  
		
		
		
		
            
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		General Description
		The following comes from Hebard (1928), Helfer (1971), Capinera and Sechrist (1982), Vickery and Kevan (1985), Capinera et al. 2004, and Scott (2010). Ceuthopilus  and related genera all have several morphological and life history features in common. Their bodies are thick and dorsally arched, hence the name “camel”, and range in body length from 13 mm to 33 mm. Heads are large, oval, bent downward and backward between the front legs and bear long antennae. Their eyes are somewhat pear-shaped with the narrow end pointing ventrally. Front and middle femora are slender and short; hind femora are thick, slightly bowed inward to the body, usually spined ventrally in males, feebly so in females. All tarsi are 4 segmented. Female ovipositors are nearly straight, stout at the basal end, tapering to the middle and upturned apically. Both males and females possess two cerci (appendages attached to the posterior tip of the abdomen) which are lush with sensory receptors. Females have an ovipositor between the two sensory cerci. All Camel Crickets are wingless and do not sing or chirp. Body colors are variable among species with individuals from brown to straw-colored, to patterned with blackish markings.
		
	
		Phenology
		Overwinters in the egg stage. Alpine Camel Cricket adults have been collected from April to October.
		
	
		Diagnostic Characteristics
		The following comes from Hebard (1928), Helfer (1971), Capinera and Sechrist (1982), Vickery and Kevan (1985), Capinera et al. (2004), and Scott (2010). The body length is small and robust. The body color can vary from brownish to straw-colored, often patterned with black markings. The pronotal length in males is 2.9 mm to 3.9 mm, and for females 3.0 mm to 3.9 mm. Legs are short, stout, and pale in color. Male subgenital plate, at the tip of the abdomens’ genitalia, is small, and broadest at base with two triangular lobes separated by a deep cleft between the lobes. The female ovipositor is short and stout at the base, tapering at the basal half to a slender curved tip bearing ventral teeth at the tip which are slender and curved.  Ceuthophilus . The Alpine Camel Cricket can be easily confused with other species in the family, Rhaphidophoridae . However, only 5 species are presently known to occur in Montana, making identification somewhat simpler (Capinera et al. 2004).
		
	
	Species Range
	
		
			Montana Range 
		Range Descriptions 
			
					
						Native 
					 
				
				
					
			 
			
		 
		
	 
	
    		Range Comments
			This species range is from British Columbia and Alberta, eastward to Iowa, and south to Colorado. In Montana, it has been reported in 5 counties (Scott 2010, and Vickery and Kevan 1985). 
			
		
		Observations in Montana Natural Heritage Program Database
		Number of Observations:  3
		
		
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				Relative Density 
				 
		
			
				Recency 
				 
		
		 
		
			
				(Observations spanning multiple months or years are excluded from time charts) 
		 
		
			
		
		
	
		Habitat
		Habitat for the Alpine Camel Cricket is poorly known, but the structure of this cricket indicates that it is a burrowing species and seldom found above ground. It has been collected in the mountains at elevations up to 13,000 feet (Capinera and Sechrist 1982, and Vickery and Kevan 1985).
		
		
	
		Food Habits
		Unknown.
		
	
		Reproductive Characteristics
		Unknown.
		
	
		Stewardship Responsibility
		
		
	
	References
	
		
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