1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:06,800 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from how Stuff Works. Hi brain 2 00:00:06,880 --> 00:00:10,039 Speaker 1: Stuff Lauren vocal bamb here. It's long been an excitedly 3 00:00:10,080 --> 00:00:12,960 Speaker 1: repeated myth that female praying mantis is have no problem 4 00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:17,040 Speaker 1: engaging in violent, cannibalistic murder when confronted with a friendly mate, 5 00:00:17,440 --> 00:00:21,120 Speaker 1: perhaps because school classrooms often host terrariums with mantis subjects. 6 00:00:21,320 --> 00:00:23,479 Speaker 1: It's one of those rumors that even children seem to know. 7 00:00:23,840 --> 00:00:26,239 Speaker 1: Don't breed with a female mantis lest your head becomes 8 00:00:26,239 --> 00:00:29,560 Speaker 1: her dinner. Sounds scary, but is it true. Do the 9 00:00:29,560 --> 00:00:32,440 Speaker 1: females of the species actually eat or decapitate their mates, 10 00:00:32,560 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 1: or are they simply being maligned by alarmed men who 11 00:00:35,680 --> 00:00:38,519 Speaker 1: perhaps empathize a little too much with their insect brethren. 12 00:00:39,159 --> 00:00:42,000 Speaker 1: The key to understanding these questions is the word species, 13 00:00:42,280 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 1: because while we might have a picture of a standard 14 00:00:44,440 --> 00:00:47,479 Speaker 1: looking green mantis in our head, there are actually two thousand, 15 00:00:47,520 --> 00:00:50,440 Speaker 1: four hundred species of the sucker. Some are colorful, some 16 00:00:50,520 --> 00:00:54,480 Speaker 1: are creepy, and some, yes, some are cannibals. But before 17 00:00:54,480 --> 00:00:57,800 Speaker 1: we get into the occasionally cruel lifestyle of the female mantis, 18 00:00:57,960 --> 00:01:00,720 Speaker 1: let's take a second to examine the basis of the 19 00:01:00,800 --> 00:01:03,880 Speaker 1: naybe myth. What we discover is that the myth is 20 00:01:03,920 --> 00:01:07,920 Speaker 1: rooted in well documented science. In an eight six observation 21 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:12,280 Speaker 1: from the journal Science, entomologist Leland Assian Howard noted that 22 00:01:12,360 --> 00:01:15,039 Speaker 1: on placing a male mantis with a female, the female 23 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:18,240 Speaker 1: systematically proceeded to eat the male's left leg, left eye, 24 00:01:18,280 --> 00:01:21,600 Speaker 1: and right leg, and then decapitate him and eat his head. 25 00:01:22,000 --> 00:01:24,360 Speaker 1: The male, keep in mind, was attempting to mate with 26 00:01:24,360 --> 00:01:27,480 Speaker 1: her the whole time, which she eventually acquiesced to with 27 00:01:27,560 --> 00:01:31,280 Speaker 1: her headless and mostly legless partner. While Howard stressed that 28 00:01:31,319 --> 00:01:34,679 Speaker 1: he had never seen it before, he also rather breathlessly stated, 29 00:01:34,920 --> 00:01:37,040 Speaker 1: it seems to be only by accident that a male 30 00:01:37,120 --> 00:01:41,200 Speaker 1: ever escapes alive from the embraces of his partner. We 31 00:01:41,319 --> 00:01:43,640 Speaker 1: see how this could make everyone think that mantis ladies 32 00:01:43,680 --> 00:01:47,160 Speaker 1: were nothing but bloodthirsty harpies. But remember Howard saw this 33 00:01:47,240 --> 00:01:51,560 Speaker 1: once with one species of mantis, Mantis Carolina. Decapitation or 34 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:54,880 Speaker 1: cannibalism went on to be observed in Mantis religiosa as well, 35 00:01:55,080 --> 00:01:57,640 Speaker 1: and a few other scientists studied the question of why 36 00:01:57,680 --> 00:02:01,880 Speaker 1: decapitation would be useful for mating. Some theories the decapitation 37 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:04,680 Speaker 1: might cause sexual movements in the male abdomen, or perhaps 38 00:02:04,680 --> 00:02:08,080 Speaker 1: part of the thorax, might actually inhibit sexual movements. Both 39 00:02:08,120 --> 00:02:11,119 Speaker 1: theories were later proved false. So here's the real deal. 40 00:02:11,440 --> 00:02:15,400 Speaker 1: Female mantises have occasionally been observed to cannibalize and decapitate 41 00:02:15,440 --> 00:02:17,880 Speaker 1: their mates, but by and large doesn't seem to be 42 00:02:17,919 --> 00:02:22,040 Speaker 1: the case. Study in animal behavior made it forty pairs 43 00:02:22,040 --> 00:02:26,080 Speaker 1: of mantis is only one was decapitated in almost seventy encounters. 44 00:02:26,560 --> 00:02:30,000 Speaker 1: Bottom line, you can stop with the cliche female mantis jokes. 45 00:02:30,240 --> 00:02:33,200 Speaker 1: Dating is hard enough. Nobody needs reputation as a man eater. 46 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:41,280 Speaker 1: Today's episode was written by Kate Kirshner and produced by 47 00:02:41,280 --> 00:02:43,680 Speaker 1: Tristan McNeil. For more on this and lots of other 48 00:02:43,720 --> 00:02:46,680 Speaker 1: myth busting topics, visit our home planet has to Works 49 00:02:46,800 --> 00:02:58,760 Speaker 1: dot com