Grasshopper Digestive System: Do Insects Have Indigestion Issues?

Anusuya Mukherjee
Nov 03, 2023 By Anusuya Mukherjee
Originally Published on Oct 12, 2022
he grasshopper digestive system is divided into foregut, midgut, and hindgut.

Grasshoppers are a group of jumping insects (suborder Caelifera) found in various settings, mostly in leafy vegetation; locusts are also a kind of grasshopper.

Grasshoppers, or locusts, are mostly found in lowland tropical woods, semiarid environments, and grasslands. There are many different species of grasshoppers, of different colors, including green, olive, or brown, with yellow or red markings.

The head, thorax, and abdomen make up a grasshopper's body.

Head: The head is large and trapezoidal. On the head are a pair of big compound eyes and a pair of antennas. A mouth opening can be found at the anterior of the head. There are some mouth appendages that surround the mouth opening.

Thorax: On the ventral side, there are three pairs of segmented legs, and on the dorsal side, there are two pairs of extended wings. The hind wings are large and membranous, whereas the fore wings are a little thicker.

Abdomen: The grasshopper's abdomen is elongated at the front and gradually narrows toward the back. Anal circi are a pair of outgrowths on the posterior end of the abdomen.

The grasshopper has organs throughout its body that sense touch, including receptors in the legs, cerci on the abdomen, and palps and antennae on the head.

Taste organs are found in the mouth, while scent organs are found on the antennae. A tympanal organ located in the first segment of the abdomen, which is linked to the thorax, allows the grasshopper to hear.

The Digestive System Of A Cockroach vs. A Grasshopper

The functions of the digestive system of grasshoppers and cockroaches are the same. The foregut, midgut, and hindgut are the three components of the alimentary canal, which is a tubular structure that reaches from the mouth to the anus of the grasshopper.

The Stomodaeum, or Foregut, is the portion of the alimentary canal that is located anterior to the gastric cecae and consists of:

Pharynx: The pharynx is the narrowest section of the head region, located between the mouth and the esophagus.

Esophagus: This is the portion of the neck that runs between the pharynx and the crop.

Crop: The esophagus's thin-walled, bulging, and extendable posterior section is used to store food.

There are eight pairs of breathing apertures called spiracles on each side of the body. Green vegetables are eaten by the grasshopper, whereas the cockroach consumes books, candy, and food.

The mouth (mandibles in biting and chewing insects), salivary gland, esophagus, crop, gizzard, mid-gut, caecum, ileum, rectum, hindgut, Malpighian tubules, and anus make up the alimentary canal of a grasshopper or cockroach.

Food is ingested through the mouth by grasshoppers and cockroaches using their forelegs and mouthparts. Food digestion in grasshoppers and cockroaches begins in the mouth, where saliva released by salivary glands combines with the ingested food.

Saliva contains enzymes that aid in the digestion of starch found in the diet. Saliva also aids in food lubrication and softening.

This partially digested food travels down the esophagus and into the crop, where it is temporarily stored. Food then travels to the gizzard, where it is further ground up by chitin teeth.

Food then passes through the stomach and into the intestines, where it is processed by glands and absorbed by other tissues. For humans, chewing is mostly done by molar teeth, but as grasshoppers lack an efficient chewing mechanism in the mouth, the gizzard is an important component.

The mouth is surrounded by mouthpieces that sharply chop and grind food, such as the maxillae, mandibles, and labium. A pair of salivary glands open in the mouth, secreting enzymes that aid in food digestion. The meal is then swallowed and deposited in the crop via the muscular esophagus.

The crop is where the food is stored. The nutrients and water are then transferred to the rest of the body through the blood. Afterward, the meal is transferred to the muscular gizzard to be ground.

The short mid-gut has six fleshy vascularized diverticulums, or mid-gut caecum, which increases the surface area for digestion and absorption. The hindgut, consisting of the ileum, colon, and rectum, shapes the feces into pellets and absorbs water and mineral salts.

The feces are later passed out through the anus. The food that the grasshopper or cockroach cannot digest also travels from the ileum to the colon, where water is absorbed.

Finally, the food that has not been digested is briefly deposited in the rectum. Undigested food is eliminated from the body through the anus, from the rectum.

Grasshoppers, like many other animals, insects, and humans, store surplus food as lipids or fats in their bodies. This fat storage technique is most visible in the grasshopper larval stage, when body size is mostly dictated by fat storage.

Nervous System of The Grasshopper

Grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, and katydids are members of the orthopterans ('straight wings') group of insects. Similar to that of humans and most other animals, the nervous system of a grasshopper is divided into two parts; the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system.

The tactile system, which tells the creature what is going on in its current state, and the motor system, which carries the orders that control muscle actions, are both parts of the peripheral nervous system.

The supraesophageal ganglion, or brain, is located dorsally in the skull above the esophagus. The protocerebrum, deutocerebrum, and tritocerebrum are three pairs of fused ganglia that supply nerves to the eyes, antennae, and labrum.

The brain is connected to the sub-esophageal ganglion by two strong circumesophageal connectives, which are created by the merger of three pairs of ganglia, namely mandibular, maxillary, and labial. It is located in the center of the head, above the mouth portions, and is slightly tilted to the posterior side.

Mandibles, maxillae, labium, hypopharynx, neck, head, and salivary region receive eight paired nerves from here. The ventral nerve cord, which is made up of paired ganglia and longitudinal connectives, extends posteriorly from the sub-esophageal ganglion.

A pair of ganglia are found in each thoracic segment, supplying nerves to the legs, wings, and internal organs. Only five pairs of abdominal ganglia send nerves to the numerous organs in the back.

An esophageal component or stomatogastric nervous system with ganglia and nerves connecting to the brain and providing to the anterior section of the gut, as well as a central sympathetic system supplying nerves to the hindgut and reproductive system, make up the visceral or sympathetic nervous system.

Peripheral nerves are arranged in a fine pattern beneath the epidermis of the body wall.

Internal Anatomy of a Grasshopper

The respiratory system, circulatory system, digestive system, excretory system, reproductive system, central nervous system, and body fat are all present in grasshoppers' internal structures, as they are in other insects.

The Alimentary Canal and salivary glands constitute the digestive system. The Alimentary Canal, also known as the gut, is divided into three main parts:

Foregut: The foregut is divided into four sections:

Mouth Opening: There is a mouth opening at the anterior end of the foregut, through which food enters. Mouth appendages surround the aperture of the mouth.

Pharynx: The pharynx is a tiny organ that sits right behind the mouth opening.

Esophagus: The first half of the esophagus is small, with the back portion expanding to form a sac-like structure known as the crop. The meal is partially digested and stored in this area. 

Gizzard: The gizzard is located behind the crop. It has a thick wall, is muscular, and is fashioned like a cone. The food is ground and crushed in the gizzard.

Mid Gut or Mesenteron: The midgut or stomach is a huge, broad sac that digests food. Several gastric caeca are present at the gizzard-to-stomach junction. These caeca open and secrete enzymes into the midgut.

Hind Gut: The hindgut is the section of the gut that is located behind the stomach. It is divided into two sections; the ileum and the small intestine. It's a tubular section, where digested food is absorbed.

Large Intestine: The large intestine, which is located next to the ileum, comprises a tubular colon and a sac-like rectum. The anal aperture is located at the end of the rectum. Undigested food is stored in the rectum as feces, which are expelled by the anus.

Salivary Glands: A pair of small branched salivary glands that release saliva and open to the buccal cavity are closely linked with the esophagus and crop.

Excretory System of Grasshoppers

The Malpighian tubules, which are wrapped around in the hemocoel and open into the anterior end of the hindgut, are the excretory organs. The Malpighian tubules feature a striated inner border and a single layer of cells as a wall. Their open ends have been entirely sealed.

The Malpighian tubules remove metabolic waste materials from the blood, which are then transported into the tubule lumen and released into the gut, before being ejected through the anus. The Malpighian tubules remove uric acid, urea, urates, calcium carbonate, oxalate, and salts since they are located in the hemocoel.

Feeding And Digestion of Grasshopper

The majority of species of grasshoppers will eat plant leaves and grasses, although certain species may eat meat if the opportunity arises. Some other species prefer forbs.

Their digestive systems are thought to have developed from a neopteran predecessor. Carbohydrate digestion takes place mostly in the crop, with midgut enzymes assisting, whereas protein digestion and final carbohydrate digestion take place in the anterior midgut ceca.

They frequently travel to new feeding places, posing a threat to farms and crops. Though the insects benefit from this system, their choice of host plants frequently causes them to clash with farmers seeking to defend their crops.

This species' ravenous appetites and enormous numbers make them a public adversary of farming communities and a target for a variety of pesticides. On bright, sunny days, feeding is most vigorous in the mid-morning hours.

These insects will devour cotton or woolen garments, wood, and handicapped grasshoppers when food is short. Grasshoppers eat grasses as well, causing extensive damage to the range and pasture fields.

Unlike many other animals, such as humans, grasshoppers have many unique digestive processes that aid in nutritional absorption. Grasshoppers eat vegetable matter.

The forelegs, labrum, and labium hold the food, which is lubricated by saliva (which includes enzymes) from the salivary glands and chewed by the mandibles and maxillae. The crop stores the food that has been chewed.

It gradually goes into the gizzard, where it is further pulverized, strained, and then passed into the stomach. Food then passes through the stomach and into the intestines, which are processed by glands and absorbed by other tissues.

A few enzymes are secreted by glands in the stomach and hepatic caeca walls, which aid digestion. Maltase, lipase, lactase, protease, trypsin, and erepsin are all found in the midgut's mildly alkaline or acidic secretions.

The midgut is where food is broken down and absorbed. The maximum nutritious material has been obtained by the time the food material reaches the rectum, and any excess water has been absorbed in the rectum. Undigested matter or residue is converted into slender feces pellets that are discharged through the anus.

FAQs

What are the parts of the digestive system of a grasshopper?

A: The different parts of the digestive system (the alimentary canal) of a grasshopper consist of the foregut, midgut, and hindgut.

What does the intestine do in a grasshopper?

A: The food consumed by a grasshopper is digested by glands in the intestine, and the digested food is absorbed by other tissues.

Does a grasshopper have an alimentary canal?

A: Yes, a grasshopper has an alimentary canal.

What is the digestive system of a grasshopper?

A: The digestive system of the grasshopper, or alimentary canal, is a tube-like enclosure that runs lengthwise through the body from mouth to anus, where food is processed.

What does the stomach of a grasshopper do?

A: When the sufficiently masticated food travels to the stomach, the stomach of the grasshopper releases a variety of digestive enzymes.

Do grasshoppers have tongues?

A: Grasshoppers do not have tongues like humans, but they have a tongue-like organ called the hypopharynx that helps mix food and saliva.

How do grasshoppers digest food?

A: The digestive system of the grasshopper is made up of a malpighian tubule that empties into the midgut. In grasshoppers, food grinding takes place in the gizzard, a muscular component of the digestive system.

The lowest half of the stomach is formed by a pouch-like structure. Its primary function is to pulverize food with a chitinous plate. Carbohydrate digestion takes place mostly in the crop, while protein digestion takes place in the ceca of the midgut.

How many tubules does a grasshopper have?

A: At the confluence of the foregut and midgut is a ring of 688 blind tubules called the hepatic or gastric caeca, which release digestive juice. Another ring of 100-150 yellow-colored thin filamentous Malpighian tubules can be found at the confluence of the midgut and hindgut.

How is a grasshopper's digestive system different from ours?

A: Grasshoppers have only one intestine, but humans have two. In addition, grasshoppers have tubules that purify their blood instead of kidneys.

What do the air tubes do in a grasshopper?

A: The spiracles and air tubes of a grasshopper allow oxygen to enter the body while also eliminating waste gases.

How many maxillae does a grasshopper have?

A: A grasshopper has two maxillae.

How do grasshoppers digest their food?

A: Food eaten by grasshoppers travels from the mouth to the crop via the esophagus. The crop is used to store food. Food then travels to the gizzard, where it is further ground up by chitin teeth. Food then passes through the stomach and into the intestines, which are processed by glands and absorbed by other tissues.

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Written by Anusuya Mukherjee

Bachelor of Arts and Law specializing in Political Science and Intellectual Property Rights

Anusuya Mukherjee picture

Anusuya MukherjeeBachelor of Arts and Law specializing in Political Science and Intellectual Property Rights

With a wealth of international experience spanning Europe, Africa, North America, and the Middle East, Anusuya brings a unique perspective to her work as a Content Assistant and Content Updating Coordinator. She holds a law degree from India and has practiced law in India and Kuwait. Anusuya is a fan of rap music and enjoys a good cup of coffee in her free time. Currently, she is working on her novel, "Mr. Ivory Merchant".

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