The Press

Nature enthusiast, 10, finds ‘something really special’ : A pink grasshoppe­r

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Like many 10-year-olds, Madeline Landecker is fascinated by insects. At her family’s small farm near Little Rock, she enjoys watching ants and ladybugs and using a net to capture butterflie­s.

Her friends in the fourth grade call her the “bug expert,” she said.

So when Madeline spotted a flash of bright pink on the ground after looking in on her chickens after school on March 14, she stooped down to get a closer look.

“I saw that it was something really special,” she said. “A pink grasshoppe­r.”

Madeline’s father, Tony Landecker, had read her a news story a year ago about the rarity of pink grasshoppe­rs, she said.

“You don’t usually get a chance to see a pink grasshoppe­r,” she said.

She gently scooped up the hot pink and green insect and noticed it was missing a leg. She decided to hold onto it and study it.

“I like taking in bugs when they’re injured so they can rest until they feel better, then I let them go,” Madeline said.

She carefully carried the grasshoppe­r over to show her dad and her little brother Levi, 8.

“I couldn’t believe she’d actually found one,” her father said.

Madeline named her new friend Millie “because I’m pretty sure she’s a girl”. “I’ve studied what male and female grasshoppe­rs look like.”

She put the rose-colored insect in a terrarium with plenty of prairie grass to eat, then went in search of a friend to keep the grasshoppe­r company.

The next day, Madeline said she took Millie to school in a bug carrier to show her off.

“Some kids were scared of her, and some of the teachers too,” she said. “Some people just don’t like bugs. But I’ve always been interested in them.”

Her dad alerted local television station KARK about the grasshoppe­r, and Madeline was soon showing off Millie on the evening news.

Although pink grasshoppe­rs aren’t commonly seen, they aren’t as rare as people might think, said Hojun Song, an entomology professor at Texas A&M University.

“What is rare is these pink insects surviving to adulthood, because they are more conspicuou­s to predators compared to normal green or brown [grasshoppe­rs] which are more cryptic,” Song said.

The pink hoppers have a condition called erythrism - a genetic mutation that causes overproduc­tion of red pigment, he said, noting that because the insects aren’t well camouflage­d, they’re more likely to be eaten.

The average life span for a grasshoppe­r is about two months, but they can survive for a couple of years in terrariums.

“I’m not ready to release her yet, because I want to study her some more and do research,” Madeline said.

Bridget Landecker said her daughter has always enjoyed looking under rocks and poking around creeks to observe the natural world.

“She’s always been drawn to the outdoors and is really dedicated to all of her animals,” Bridget said.

Madeline said she’s already formed an attachment to her tiniest pet. She said Millie stays on her hand and rarely jumps off while her parents snap quick pictures.

“If I could, I would keep her forever,” Madeline said. Washington Post

 ?? ?? Millie, a pink grasshoppe­r caught by 10-year-old Madeline Landecker in Arkansa.
Millie, a pink grasshoppe­r caught by 10-year-old Madeline Landecker in Arkansa.

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