The tusked stink bug was discovered in a search for new species Nikolai Tatarnic/Western Australian Museum
An unusual species of stink bug with large forked horns and orange tusks has been found in Tjaltjraak Boodja Park near Esperance in Western Australia.
at the University of New South Wales and at the Western Australian Museum spotted the stink bug, which is believed to be new to science and has yet to be named, with the help of Indigenous Tjaltjraak park rangers.
As part of a two-week ââ â an Australian government scheme to identify new species â the team placed nets under plants in the area and beat them with a stick to dislodge and collect insects.
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âIt was getting towards the end of the trip and I wasnât having much luck, but then I found one of these and there was great excitement,â says Cassis. âSo then we bunkered down and found lots more.â
The pea-sized creature has brown and orange patterning that allows it to camouflage with the plant species that it lives on, a shrub called Hakea commutata.
Males and females both have two large forked horns. These appear to provide extra camouflage by resembling the pointy tips of the host plantâs leaves, says Cassis. â[The stink bugs] blend in with their plants really well â theyâre very hard to spot,â he says.
The males also have two orange tusks that are only seen in a handful of other stink bug species in the world. âWe donât know what theyâre for yet,â says Tatarnic. âThey could be for courtship, or they could be used to lever other males off the plant as they compete for females.â
Like other stink bugs, the species has glands for secreting odours to ward off predators, but its specific secretions havenât been studied yet.
It also has a patch of white matted hair on its side that âmay serve like a blanket for heat regulationâ, says Cassis. “We really don’t know much about this species yet.”
Australia is well-known for its unusual animals, including the platypus, kangaroo and koala, but there is a growing appreciation that this extends to the insect world too, says Cassis. âThe continent has been isolated for a long time so thereâs been a huge amount of evolution thatâs endemic to Australia,â he says.
Article amended on 12 July 2023
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