
A cockroach can run up to about 50 body lengths per second. If a human moved at that proportional speed, it would be like sprinting hundreds of kilometres per hour.
More curious facts about cockroach(es)
- Cockroach are ancient. Their ancestors appeared roughly 300 million years ago, long before dinosaurs. They have outlasted mass extinctions that erased countless other lineages.
- Of the roughly 4,500-plus cockroach species known, only a tiny fraction, around 30 or so, are associated with human homes. Most live outdoors and many are ecologically useful decomposers.
- Their antennae function as highly sensitive sensory systems, detecting air movement, chemicals, obstacles and danger in ways that act almost like distributed environmental scanning.
- Some cockroaches can squeeze through gaps only a few millimetres high by flattening their bodies, which is partly why they are such effective survivors.
- They can survive for weeks without food, and some species can tolerate extraordinary stress compared with many animals.
- Their leg mechanics and rapid gait have inspired robotics research. Engineers have studied cockroach locomotion to design search-and-rescue robots that can move through rubble.
- They are among the fastest-reacting insects. Some can respond to threats in milliseconds.
Closing thought
So next time when you see a cockroach think of it as evolution’s most enduring prototypes, refined for 300 million years with very little need for redesign!