The females are much larger and wider than the males, reaching to in length and 30 to 65 g in weight, making them among the heaviest
phasmids and extant insects. In addition to the typically lime green-colored females, there are also yellow and even more rarely red-brown females. Their two pairs of wings are both shortened. At rest, the green forewings, formed as
tegmina, cover the somewhat shorter, strikingly pink-colored membranous hind wings, here formed as alae, however they are incapable of flight. The head, body and legs are thorny. The flattened body is provided with a number of spines, in particular along the body edges including the
abdomen and the legs, and especially along the hind legs. At the end of the abdomen there is a secondary
ovipositor for laying the eggs in the ground. It surrounds the actual ovipositor and is
ventral formed from the eighth
sternite, here named subgenital plate or
operculum and
dorsally from the eleventh
tergum, which is referred to here as the supraanal plate or
epiproct. The much smaller males are slender and only about to long. They have spines all over their body and legs like the females, and are usually a mottled brown colour. The hind wings cover the entire abdomen. The narrow, but only slightly shorter forewings are designed as tegmina to and have a light front edge, which gives the animals with closed wings the typical lateral stripes over the
mesonotum and half of the abdomen. The fully developed hind wings are reddish and marked with a brown net pattern. == Distribution area and lifestyle ==