A pet stick insect gave its owner a shock when it shed its skin and revealed itself to be half-male and half-female.
Named Charlie, the green bean stick insect is the ‘first reported gynandromorph’ in that species according to experts at the Natural History Museum.
They said the creature, which shed its skin at home in Suffolk to reveal the bright green body of a female and brown wings of a male, was a ‘particularly impressive specimen’.
Owner Lauren Garfield has now donated Charlie to the London museum for scientific research.
A pet stick insect named Charlie (pictured) gave its owner a shock when it shed its skin and revealed itself to be half-male and half-female
The green bean stick insect is the ‘first reported gynandromorph’ in that species according to the experts at the Natural History Museum.
This image shows the differenct size and colour of a male (left) and female (right) stick insect
However, she said unfortunately the insect would have to be euthanised so it can be studied in the future, because if they die naturally the creatures ‘shrivel up and lose their colour’.
Mrs Garfield said that Charlie originally looked like the other stick insects she keeps and breeds at her home in Waldringfield.
But when it shed its skin, people began to take notice, so she shared a ‘weird post alert’ about the stick insect, known as Diapherodes gigantea, on her Facebook page.
‘I’ve bred stick insects for a few years — and have (accidentally) bred a gynandromorphic green bean stick insect,’ Mrs Garfield wrote.
‘That means half of it is female (the green side) and half male (brown side with a wing).’
Males typically have a body length between 3.5inches (9cm) and 5inches (13cm), while females grow to between 5.5inches (14cm) and 7inches (18cm).
She said her son was so excited by the discovery that she took Charlie into school to show to the other children, before getting in touch with an insect expert at the Natural History Museum in London.
After swapping photographs, she later agreed to post Charlie to the museum so the stick insect could be further inspected by experts.
In her Facebook post, Mrs Garfield added: ‘It’s rarely been reported before in this species so Charlie (named by the kids) has been signed over to, and has today gone to the Natural History Museum in London, to be added to their collection and I’ve been asked to write a journal article about it. I’m strangely excited.’
Experts said the creature, which shed its skin at home in Suffolk to reveal the bright green body of a female and brown wings of a male, was a ‘particularly impressive specimen’
Owner Lauren Garfield has now donated Charlie to the London museum for scientific research
However, she said unfortunately the insect would have to be euthanised so it can be studied in the future, because if they die naturally the creatures ‘shrivel up and lose their colour’
Stick insects moult several times and Mrs Garfield said that Charlie originally looked like the other stick insects she keeps and breeds at her home in Waldringfield
But when it shed its skin, people began to take notice, so she shared a ‘weird post alert’ about the stick insect, known as Diapherodes gigantea, on her Facebook page (pictured)
The insect expert she spoke to, Paul Brock, told the BBC: ‘Lauren’s specimen has a largely brown (male) body form on the right hand side, with full length hind-wings.
‘The left hand side is not as broad as a typical adult female, but broader than a normal male and mainly apple green, as in a normal female.
‘In a gynandromorph, including this individual, the genitalia are not properly formed so although male-like, it would not be able to mate properly with a female.’
Mr Brock said Charlie would be added to the Natural History Museum’s collection, ‘where it will be of interest to researchers’.
Diapherodes gigantea is commonly known as the giant lime green stick insect or green bean stick insect.
The species is native to three Caribbean islands — St Vincent, Grenada and St Lucia — and in the wild they feed on the leaves of plants and trees in rainforest areas.
In captivity, the insects eat the leaves of brambles, eucalyptus or oak.
They are considered relatively easy pets to keep, with a lifespan in captivity of up to one year.
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