The Straight Dope covered this a few years back (reference 1).
Dear Cecil:
While working part-time in the food service at USC, I had the opportunity to see thousands of dead cockroaches. One thing about these roaches intrigues me: why did they all die on their backs? Is it programmed into their tiny little genes, or do they do it just to bug us? --Leslie, University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Dear Leslie:
Frankly, if I saw thousands of dead cockroaches at the food service where I went to school, I'd have other things on my mind than why they all died on their backs. Besides, they don't always die that way--basically it depends on how the little scumbags happen to meet their Maker. I've been discussing the subject with the crack bug scientists at some of the nation's leading institutions of higher learning, and we've formulated the following Roach Mortality Scenarios, which represent a major step forward in our understanding of roach postmortem positioning:
(1) Roach has heart attack while crawling on the wall. OK, so maybe roaches don't have heart attacks. Just suppose the roach croaks somehow and tumbles earthward. The aerodynamics of the roach corpse (smooth on the back, or wing side; irregular on the front, or leg side) are such that the critter will tend to land on its back. Or so goes the theory. Admittedly the study of bug airfoil characteristics is not as advanced as it might be.
(2) Roach desiccates, i.e., dries out, after the manner of Gloria Vanderbilt. This is what happens when you use Cecil's Guaranteed Roach Assassination Technique, described elsewhere in this archive. The roach saunters carelessly through the lethal borax crystals, causing him to lose precious bodily fluids and eventually die. Since this process is gradual, it may happen that the roach simply conks out and dies on its belly.
(3) Roach dies after ingesting potent neurotoxins, e.g., Diet Coke, some traditional bug poison like pyrethrum, or the food served at USC cafeterias. Neurotoxins cause the roach to twitch itself to death, in the course of which it will frequently kick over on its back, there to flail helplessly until the end comes. No doubt this accounts for the supine position of the deceased cockroaches you observed.
One unresolved issue. Having seen thousands of dead roaches, did it occur to you to avail yourself of, say, a broom?
--CECIL ADAMS
2006-09-02 07:31:36
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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First, few cockroaches die on their backs in the wild. Natural death of cockroaches probably occurs in the stomach of a bird, bat or other small animal.
Second, Cockroaches are not used to living on a polished marble or vinyl floor. They are more used to a ruguous living plane including leaves and sticks and other vegetable debris. Thus when a cockroach finds itself on its back (by some mistake in its orienteering) it may have trouble righting itself if there is not debris around to grab hold of with its legs. (Try it, put a cockroach on its back on a polished floor with and without some crinkled paper.)
Third, often we come across dead cockroaches in buildings that have died of insecticide. Most of these insecticides are organophosphate nerve poisons. The nerve poison often inhibits cholinesterase, an enzyme that breaks down acetyl choline (ACh), a neurotransmitter. With extra ACh in the nervous system, the cockroach has muscular spasms which often result in the cockroach flipping on its back. Without muscular coordination the cockroach cannot right itself and eventually dies in its upside down-position.
I think this explains it all.
2006-09-02 22:12:39
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answer #2
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answered by CARLOS_TINCO 2
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Do what I did. I in simple terms mentioned "i don't even care approximately that sh!t from now on" now I even have very few friends, very few issues, and not something to be afflicted approximately. Social issues are stupid and meaningless. in simple terms calm down, decrease back on the alc tho thats undesirable for you. Get some bud in case you fairly want some thing to take the area off, and in simple terms avert social matters with the help of not being social
2016-11-23 19:25:40
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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They don't always flip over. Some lay there very flat, especially when stomped on.
2006-09-02 07:06:58
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answer #4
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answered by chameleon 3
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Hats off to you Truckie101
2006-09-02 17:44:29
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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All the roaches that I see dead are right side up. Because that is the position they are in when they are squashed.
2006-09-02 07:56:52
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answer #6
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answered by cycloneweaver.com 3
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Not always. Cause of death is of major importance here.
2006-09-02 21:02:36
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answer #7
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answered by nelabis 6
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nope
2006-09-02 08:26:26
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answer #8
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answered by Zman 2
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