Orthoptera conservation: pests and paradoxes M.J. SamwaysJ.A. Lockwood OriginalPaper Pages: 143 - 149
The taxonomic impediment in orthopteran research and conservation S.V. Green OriginalPaper Pages: 151 - 159
Why are some weta (Orthoptera: Stenopelmatidae) vulnerable yet others are common? George W. Gibbs OriginalPaper Pages: 161 - 166
Moroccan locust Dociostaurus maroccanus (Thunberg, 1815): a faunistic rarity or an important economic pest? Alexandre V. Latchininsky OriginalPaper Pages: 167 - 178
Conserving Orthoptera in the wild: lessons from Trimerotropis infantilis (Oedipodinae) J.M. Hoekstra OriginalPaper Pages: 179 - 185
Major threats to a protected grasshopper, Prionotropis hystrix rhodanica (Orthoptera, Pamphagidae, Akicerinae), endemic to southern France Antoine FoucartMichel Lecoq OriginalPaper Pages: 187 - 193
Translocating a threatened New Zealand giant orthopteran, Deinacrida sp. (Stenopelmatidae): some lessons Greg H. Sherley OriginalPaper Pages: 195 - 199
The captive rearing of threatened Orthoptera: a comparison of the conservation potential and practical considerations of two species' breeding programmes at the Zoological Society of London P. Pearce-KellyR. JonesA.A. Cunningham OriginalPaper Pages: 201 - 210
Acoustic monitoring of Orthoptera and its potential for conservation Klaus Riede OriginalPaper Pages: 217 - 223
The grasshoppers of Costa Rica: a survey of the parameters influencing their conservation and survival C.H.F. Rowell OriginalPaper Pages: 225 - 234
The orthopteroids of the Seychelles: a threatened island fauna P. Matyot OriginalPaper Pages: 235 - 246
Conservation of orthopteran biological diversity relative to landscape change in temperate Eurasia Michael G. Sergeev OriginalPaper Pages: 247 - 252
Management of orthopteran pests: a conservation perspective Jeffrey A. Lockwood OriginalPaper Pages: 253 - 261
Non-target grasshoppers as indicators of the side-effects of chemical locust control in the Karoo, South Africa David A.B. Stewart OriginalPaper Pages: 263 - 276
SUMMARY Conservation and control: the paradoxical mutualism of orthopterology Legacy Pages: 277 - 278