Information About Cockroaches

October 10, 2008

Or Just Roaches If You’re Trying To Be Cool.

I was pouring a stiff Jameson in the kitchen the other day when I saw a cockroach scurrying under the dishwasher. This freaked me out a little bit as I didn’t even know we had a dishwasher, and wondered if The Girlfriend had not done some redecorating again.

As it turned out, I had simply staggered into the wrong apartment and, upon entering The HQ, decided to read up on the cockroach and find out what they’re all about.

Cockroach: What Are You All About?

Cockroach: What Are You All About?

Cockroaches (or simply “roaches”) are insects of the order Blattaria. This name derives from the Latin word for “cockroach”, blatta.

There are about 4,000 species of cockroach of which 30 species are associated with human habitations and about four species are well known as pests, with the best-known species of course being the American cockroach.

Cockroaches live in a wide range of environments around the world. Pest species of cockroaches adapt readily to a variety of environments, but prefer warm conditions found within buildings. Many tropical species prefer even warmer environments and do not fare well in the average household.

The spines on the legs were earlier considered to be sensory, but observations of their locomotion on sand and wire meshes has demonstrated that they help in locomotion on difficult terrain. The structures have been used as inspiration for robotic legs.

Cockroaches leave chemical trails in their feces as well as emitting airborne pheromones for swarming and mating. Other cockroaches will follow these trails to discover sources of food and water, and also discover where other cockroaches are hiding. Thus, cockroaches can exhibit emergent behavior, in which group or swarm behavior emerges from a simple set of individual interactions.

Research has shown that group-based decision-making is responsible for complex behavior such as resource allocation. In a study where 50 cockroaches were placed in a dish with three shelters with a capacity for 40 insects in each, the insects arranged themselves in two shelters with 25 insects in each, leaving the third shelter empty. When the capacity of the shelters was increased to more than 40 insects per shelter, all of the cockroaches arranged themselves in one shelter. Researchers found a balance between cooperation and competition exists in group decision-making behavior found in cockroaches. The models used in this research can also explain the group dynamics of other insects and animals.

Cockroaches are mainly nocturnal and will run away when exposed to light. A peculiar exception is the Asian cockroach, which is attracted to light. Another study tested the hypothesis that cockroaches use just two pieces of information to decide where to go under those conditions: how dark it is and how many of their friends are there. The study conducted by José Halloy and colleagues at the Free University of Brussels and other European institutions created a set of tiny robots that to the roaches appear to be other roaches and can thus alter the roaches’ perception of critical mass. The robots were also specially scented so that they would be accepted by the real roaches.

[via Wikipedia]

Hectic. Who knew cockroaches were so smart? That shelter vibe really impressed me.

Apparently they can also survive a nuclear explosion because of their exo-skeletons, which are nuclear bomb resistant.

So now you know.


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2 Comments so far

  1. saaleha October 10, 2008 9:59 am

    blatta hey? more like crunch when they get stepped on. I don’t like goggas.
    But this is intriguing, in a bizarro world, they’d be stepping on us.

  2. Oke October 13, 2008 11:59 am

    You can put a cockroach in a matchbox, then throw the matchbox in a piece of flame, and then watch as the ‘roach miraculously escapes with a double-somersault flourish and lands on his knees with a cheer from the peanut gallery. I’ve never tried it, but I think it can be done. You just need to find the right ‘roach.

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