Fire-adapted

Guides

  • Anotia fitchi

    ball-nosed planthopper

    Anotia fitchi is a rare, flightless or weakly-flying planthopper species endemic to North American tallgrass prairies. Adults measure less than 5 mm in length but can leap up to 35 inches—approximately 250 times their body length—making them among the most prodigious jumpers relative to size in the insect world. The species was historically known from scattered records across 16 U.S. states and Ontario, Canada, but 90% of all collected specimens come from a single 12-year study in Iowa prairies. Its distinctive inflated, spherical beak may function in intraspecific communication.

  • Cicadettana calliope floridensis

    little green cicada

    Cicadettana calliope floridensis is a subspecies of the little green cicada, a small cicada in the family Cicadidae. It belongs to a genus with only two species in the United States. The subspecies was described by Davis in 1920 and is currently considered valid. Like other members of its species, it is associated with grassland habitats and has a biology adapted to fire-prone environments.

  • Forelius pruinosus

    high noon ant

    Forelius pruinosus, commonly known as the high noon ant, is a North American ant species in the subfamily Dolichoderinae. It is notable for its diurnal foraging activity during hot, dry conditions, its polygynous colony structure with multiple queens, and its documented mutualistic relationships with various plants and insects. The species has been observed in sea turtle nests on Georgia's barrier islands and has been studied as a native ant mutualist in contrast to invasive ant species.

  • Gryllotalpa major

    prairie mole cricket

    Gryllotalpa major, the prairie mole cricket, is the largest cricket species in North America, endemic to the tallgrass prairie ecosystems of the south-central United States. Males exhibit a classical lekking mating system, constructing specialized acoustic burrows that amplify their calling songs to attract flying females from distances up to 400 meters. The species is threatened by habitat loss due to prairie conversion, with current populations restricted to fragmented sites in Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Arkansas. Research has documented unique acoustic behaviors, including harmonic chirps rather than trills, and vibrational communication between neighboring males through the soil.

  • Sericoda

    Sericoda is a genus of harpaline ground beetles native to the Holarctic region, with apparent North American origin. These beetles are pyrophilous, meaning they are strongly attracted to burned areas following forest fires. They are generally smaller than related genera such as Agonum. Two species, Sericoda quadripunctata and S. bembidioides, have been extensively studied in boreal forests of Alberta, Canada, where they serve as hosts for phoretic mites of the genus Antennoseius.

  • Sericoda quadripunctata

    Four-spotted Sericoda

    Sericoda quadripunctata is a pyrophilous ground beetle strongly associated with recently burned forests in boreal regions. Its abundance peaks in the first year after wildfire and declines sharply by the third post-fire year. The species serves as a phoretic host for specialized mites (Antennoseius perseus and A. pyrophilus) that inhabit the space beneath its elytra. It occurs across the Holarctic region, including Europe, Northern Asia, and North America.