Sigaus australis is the most common alpine grasshopper found in New Zealand. It can be found in the southern half of the South Island above the tree line. Sigaus australis was described in 1897 by Frederick Hutton. Like all of New Zealand sub-alpine and alpine grasshoppers S. australis has a 2 or 3 years life cycle. Individuals can survive the cold by freezing solid at any life stage, at any time of the year. Sigaus australis adults are relatively large grasshoppers . The genus Sigaus is endemic to New Zealand.

Host Genome

No genome information available

Related Symbionts

4 records

Symbiont records associated with Sigaus australis

Classification Function Function Tags Reference
Fusarium spp.

Ascomycota

Fungi

contribute to freeze-tolerance of the insect hosts

Mortierella spp.

Mucoromycota

Fungi

contribute to freeze-tolerance of the insect hosts

Bacteria

contribute to freeze-tolerance of the insect hosts

Pseudomonas syringae

Pseudomonadota

Bacteria

initiate crystallization of water

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Metagenome Information

0 records

Metagenome sequencing data associated with Sigaus australis

Run Platform Location Date BioProject

No metagenomes found

No metagenome records associated with this host species.

Amplicon Information

0 records

Amplicon sequencing data associated with Sigaus australis

Run Classification Platform Location Environment

No amplicons found

No amplicon records associated with this host species.

Related Articles

0 records

Research articles related to Sigaus australis

Title Authors Journal Year DOI

No articles found

No research articles associated with Sigaus australis.