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Cricket (insect)

 

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Cricket (insect)



 
 
Crickets, family Gryllidae (also known as "true crickets"), are insect
Insect

Insects are the biggest class of arthropods and the only ones with wings. They are the most diverse group of animals on the planet. They are most diverse at the equator and their diversity declines toward the poles....
s somewhat related to grasshopper
Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish them from Tettigoniidae, they are sometimes referred to as short-horned grasshoppers....
s and more closely related to katydids or bush crickets
Tettigoniidae

The family Tettigoniidae, known in American English as katydids and in British English as bush-crickets, contains more than 6,400 species....
 (family Tettigoniidae). They have somewhat flattened bodies and long antennae
Antenna (biology)

Antennae are paired appendages connected to the front-most morphogenesis of arthropods. In crustaceans, they are biramous and present on the first two segments of the head, with the smaller pair known as antennules....
. There are about 900 species
Species

In biology, a species is one of the basic units of biological classification and a taxonomic rank. A species is often defined as a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring....
 of crickets. They tend to be nocturnal and are often confused with grasshopper
Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish them from Tettigoniidae, they are sometimes referred to as short-horned grasshoppers....
s because they have a similar body structure including jumping hind legs.

left forewing of the male has a thick rib (a modified vein) which bears 50 to 300 ridges.






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Crickets, family Gryllidae (also known as "true crickets"), are insect
Insect

Insects are the biggest class of arthropods and the only ones with wings. They are the most diverse group of animals on the planet. They are most diverse at the equator and their diversity declines toward the poles....
s somewhat related to grasshopper
Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish them from Tettigoniidae, they are sometimes referred to as short-horned grasshoppers....
s and more closely related to katydids or bush crickets
Tettigoniidae

The family Tettigoniidae, known in American English as katydids and in British English as bush-crickets, contains more than 6,400 species....
 (family Tettigoniidae). They have somewhat flattened bodies and long antennae
Antenna (biology)

Antennae are paired appendages connected to the front-most morphogenesis of arthropods. In crustaceans, they are biramous and present on the first two segments of the head, with the smaller pair known as antennules....
. There are about 900 species
Species

In biology, a species is one of the basic units of biological classification and a taxonomic rank. A species is often defined as a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring....
 of crickets. They tend to be nocturnal and are often confused with grasshopper
Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish them from Tettigoniidae, they are sometimes referred to as short-horned grasshoppers....
s because they have a similar body structure including jumping hind legs.

Cricket chirping

The left forewing of the male has a thick rib (a modified vein) which bears 50 to 300 ridges. The chirp (which only male crickets can do) is generated by raising their left forewing
Insect wing

Insect wings are outgrowths of the insect exoskeleton that enable insects to Insect flight. They are found on the second and third thorax segments , and the two pairs are often referred to as the forewings and hindwings, respectively, though a few insects lack hindwings, even rudiments....
 to a 45 degree angle and rubbing it against the upper hind edge of the right forewing, which has a thick scraper (Berenbaum 1995). This sound producing action is called stridulation
Stridulation

Stridulation is the act of producing sound by rubbing together certain body parts. This behavior is mostly associated with insects, but other animals are known to do this as well, such as a number of species of snakes and spiders....
 and the song is species
Species

In biology, a species is one of the basic units of biological classification and a taxonomic rank. A species is often defined as a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring....
-specific.

There are four types of cricket song: The calling song attracts females and repels other males, and is fairly loud. The courting song is used when a female cricket is near, and is a very quiet song. An aggressive song is triggered by chemoreceptors on the antennae that detect the near presence of another male cricket and a copulatory song is produced for a brief period after successful deposition of sperm on the female's eggs.

Crickets chirp
Stridulation

Stridulation is the act of producing sound by rubbing together certain body parts. This behavior is mostly associated with insects, but other animals are known to do this as well, such as a number of species of snakes and spiders....
 at different rates depending on their species and the temperature of their environment
Environment (biophysical)

The biophysical environment is the symbiosis between the physics environment and the biological life forms within the environment, and include all variables that comprise the Earth's biosphere....
. Most species chirp at higher rates the higher the temperature is (approx. 62 chirps a minute at 13°C
Celsius

Celsius is a temperature scale that is named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius , who developed a similar temperature scale two years before his death....
 in one common species; each species has its own rate). The relationship between temperature and the rate of chirping is known as Dolbear's Law
Dolbear's Law

Dolbear's Law states the relationship between the air temperature and the rate at which Snowy Tree Crickets, Oecanthus fultoni, chirp. It was formulated by Amos Dolbear and published in 1897 in an article called The Cricket as a Thermometer....
. In fact, according to this law, it is possible to calculate the temperature in Fahrenheit
Fahrenheit

Fahrenheit is a temperature scale named after the physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit , who proposed it in 1724. Today, the scale has largely been replaced by the Celsius scale; it is still in use for non-scientific purposes in the United States and a few other countries such as Belize....
 by adding 40 to the number of chirps produced in 15 seconds by the snowy tree cricket common in the United States.

Crickets, like all other insects, are cold-blooded. They take on the temperature of their surroundings. Many characteristics of cold-blooded animals, like the rate at which crickets chirp, or the speed at which ants walk, follow a special equation called the Arrhenius equation. This equation describes the activation energy or threshold energy required to induce a chemical reaction. For instance, crickets, like all other organisms, have many chemical reactions occurring within their bodies. As the temperature rises, it becomes easier to reach a certain activation or threshold energy, and chemical reactions, like those that occur during the muscle contractions used to produce chirping, happen more rapidly. As the temperature falls, the rate of chemical reactions inside the crickets' bodies slow down, causing characteristics, such as chirping, to also slow down.

Crickets have tympanic membranes
Eardrum

The tympanic membrane , is a thin biological membrane that separates the external ear from the middle ear. Its function is to transmit sound from the air to the ossicles inside the middle ear....
 located just below the middle joint of each front leg. This enables them to hear another cricket's song.

In 1975, Dr. William H. Cade
William H. Cade

Dr. William H. "Bill" Cade is a biologist and the President of the University of Lethbridge. He researches the role of acoustic signals in field cricket mating behaviour....
 discovered that the parasitic tachinid
Tachinidae

Tachinidae is a large and rather variable family of fly within the insect order Diptera, with more than 8,200 known species and many more to be discovered....
 fly
Fly

True flies are insects of the Order Diptera , possessing a single pair of insect wing on the mesothorax and a pair of halteres, derived from the hind wings, on the metathorax....
 Ormia ochracea
Ormia ochracea

Ormia ochracea is a small yellow fly, a parasitoid of Cricket s. It is notable because of its exceptionally acute directional hearing. The female is attracted by the song of the male cricket and deposits larvae on or around him, as was discovered in 1975 by the zoologist William H....
 is attracted to the song of the male cricket, and uses it to locate the male in order to deposit her larva
Larva

A larva is a young form of animal with indirect developmental biology, going through or undergoing metamorphosis .The larva can look completely different from the adult form, for example, a caterpillar differs from a butterfly....
e on him. It was the first example of a natural enemy that locates its host or prey using the mating signal. Since then, many species of crickets have been found to be carrying the same parasitic fly, or related species. In response, a mutation leaving males unable to chirp was observed amongst a population of field crickets
Teleogryllus oceanicus

Teleogryllus oceanicus commonly known as the Australian, Pacific or oceanic field cricket is a cricket that occurs across the Oceania and in coastal Australia from Carnarvon in Western Australia and Rockhampton in north-east Queensland....
 on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.

Diet and life cycle

Crickets are omnivores and scavengers feeding on organic materials, as well as decaying plant material, fungi, and some seedling plants. Crickets also have been known to eat their own dead when there is no other source of food available, and even exhibit predatorial behavior on other weakened or dead crickets. Crickets have relatively powerful jaws, and have been known to bite humans, mostly without breaking the skin. The bite can, however, be painful when inflicted on sensitive skin such as the webbing between fingers.

Crickets mate in late summer and lay their eggs in the fall. The eggs hatch in the spring and have been estimated to number as high as 2,000 per fertile female. Subspecies Acheta Domestica however lays eggs almost continually, with the females capable of laying at least twice a month. Female crickets have a long needlelike egg-laying organ
Ovipositor

The ovipositor is an organ used by some animals for oviposition, i.e. the laying of Egg . It consists of a maximum of three pairs of appendages formed to transmit the egg, to prepare a place for it, and to place it properly....
 called an ovipositor.

Crickets are popular as a live food source for carnivorous pets like frogs, lizards, tortoises, salamanders, and spiders. Feeding crickets with nutritious food in order to pass the nutrition onto animals that eat them is known as gut loading
Gut loading

Gut loading is the process by which an animal's prey is raised and fed nutritious foods with the intention of passing those nutrients to the animal for which the prey is intended....
. In addition to this, the crickets are often dusted with a mineral supplement powder to ensure complete nutrition to the pet.

Crickets are also eaten by humans in some African and Asian cultures, where they are often considered a delicacy. There have been movements to promote the eating of insects in Western countries because of high protein content, often with little success as most Western people are naturally repulsed by insects.

Popular culture

Crickets are popular pets and are considered good luck in Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
, especially China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 where they are kept in cages (Carrera 1991). It is also common to have them as caged pets in some Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
an countries, particularly in the Iberian Peninsula
Iberian Peninsula

The Iberian Peninsula, or Iberia, is located in the extreme southwest of Europe and includes modern-day Spain, Portugal, Andorra and Gibraltar and a very small area of France....
. Cricket fighting
Cricket fighting

Cricket fighting is a bloodsport involving the fighting of Cricket ....
 as a gambling
Gambling

Gambling is the wikt:wager#Verb of money or something of material Value on an event with an uncertain outcome with the primary intent of winning additional money and/or material goods....
 or sports betting
Sports betting

Sports betting is the general activity of predicting sports results by making a wager on the outcome of a sporting event. Perhaps more so than other forms of gambling, the legality and general acceptance of sports betting varies from nation to nation....
 pastime also occurs, particularly in Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
.

The folklore and mythology surrounding crickets is extensive.

The singing of crickets in the folklore of Brazil and elsewhere is sometimes taken to be a sign of impending rain, or of a financial windfall. In Brazilian history, the sudden chirping of a cricket heralded the sighting of land for the crew of captain Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca

?lvar N??ez Cabeza de Vaca was an early Spain explorer of the New World and is remembered as a protoanthropological author....
, just as their water supply had run out. (Lenko and Papavero 1996). In Caraguatatuba
Caraguatatuba

Caraguatatuba, widely known by its abbreviation Caragu?, is a city in the northeastern state of S?o Paulo in Brazil. The name comes from the Tupi language and one of the words includes tuba meaning wikt:en:many....
, Brazil, a black cricket in a room is said to portend illness; a gray one, money; and a green one, hope
Hope

Hope is a belief in a positive outcome related to events and circumstances in one's life. Hope is the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best....
 (Lenko and Papavero 1996). In Alagoas
Alagoas

Alagoas is a small States of Brazil in northeastern Brazil lying between the states of Pernambuco and Sergipe; touching the state of Bahia along a part of its southwestern border....
 state, northeast Brazil, a cricket announces death, thus it is killed if it chirps in a house (Araújo 1977). In the village of Capueiruçu, Bahia
Bahia

Bahia is one of the 26 states of Brazil, and is located in the northeastern part of the country on the Atlantic coast.It is the fourth most populous Brazilian state after S?o Paulo , Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro , and the fifth-largest in size....
 State, a constantly chirping cricket foretells pregnancy, but if it pauses, money is expected (K.L.G. Lima, unpublished data). The mole cricket
Mole cricket

The mole crickets compose Family Gryllotalpidae, of thick-bodied insects about 3-5 cm long, with large beady compound eye and shovel-like arthropod leg highly developed for burrowing and swimming....
 locally known as "paquinha", "jeguinho", "cachorrinho-d'água", or "cava-chão" (genera Scapteriscus and Neocurtilla, Gryllotalpidae) is said to predict rain when it digs into the ground (Fowler 1994).

In Barbados
Barbados

Barbados , situated just east of the Caribbean Sea, is an independent Continental Island-island nation in the western Atlantic Ocean. Located at roughly 13? North of the equator and 59? West of the prime meridian, it is considered a part of the Lesser Antilles....
, a loud cricket means money is coming in; hence, a cricket must not be killed or evicted if it chirps inside a house. However, another type of cricket that is less noisy forebodes illness or death. (Forde 1988) In Zambia
Zambia

The Republic of Zambia is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. The neighbouring countries are the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the north, Tanzania to the north-east, Malawi to the east, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Namibia to the south, and Angola to the west....
, the Gryllotalpa africanus cricket is held to bring good fortune to anyone who sees it (Mbata 1999).

In American comedy, the sound of crickets may be used to humorously indicate a dead silence when a response or activity is expected. For example, if a comedian in a TV show tells a bad joke, instead of the audience laughing, crickets may chirp.

Similarly on political blog
Blog

A blog is a type of website, usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video....
s, writers may use the concept of "crickets chirping" in a rhetoric
Rhetoric

Rhetoric is the art of using language as a means to persuade. Along with logic and dialectic, rhetoric is one of the three ancient arts of discourse....
al sense to signal that the writer believes that he or she has made a point that a hypothetical opponent cannot answer. The space that would have been occupied by the nonexistent answer is instead occupied by the symbolic word *crickets* to symbolize this silence.

Chester Cricket is the main protagonist in the popular book The Cricket In Times Square by George Selden
George Selden

George Selden may refer to:*George B. Selden, American inventor*George Selden , American children's writer...
.

The Walt Disney corporation has used a number of notable cricket characters in their animated movies through the ages. Most of these characters represent good. For example, in the movie Pinocchio
Pinocchio (1940 film)

Pinocchio is the second animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. It was produced by Walt Disney and was originally released to theatres by RKO Radio Pictures on February 7, 1940....
, Jiminy Cricket
Jiminy Cricket

Jiminy Cricket is the Walt Disney version of "The Talking Cricket" , a fictional character created by Carlo Collodi for his classic novel The Adventures of Pinocchio, which was adapted into Pinocchio ....
 is honored with the position of the title character's conscience. In Mulan
Mulan

Mulan is a 1998 United States animated feature film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, and released by Walt Disney Pictures on June 19, 1998....
, Cri-kee is carried in a cage as a symbol of luck, as in many Asian countries.

"Cricket" is musician slang for a harmonica
Harmonica

The harmonica is a free reed aerophone wind instrument which is played by blowing air into it or drawing air out by placing lips over individual holes or multiple holes....
. Van Morrison
Van Morrison

George Ivan Morrison Order of the British Empire is a Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter, author, poet and multi-instrumentalist, who has been a professional musician since the late 1950s....
 may be heard calling for the "cricket" in the studio version of "Bright Side of the Road", introducing the harmonica solo.

The Crickets
The Crickets

The Crickets were a rock & roll band from Lubbock, Texas, formed by singer/songwriter Buddy Holly in the 1950s.Their first hit record was "That'll Be the Day," released in 1957....
 were the band of legendary Rock n' Roll pioneer Buddy Holly
Buddy Holly

Charles Hardin Holley, known professionally as Buddy Holly was an American singer-songwriter and a pioneer of rock and roll. Although his success lasted only a year and a half before his The Day the Music Died, Holly is described by critic Bruce Eder as "the single most influential creative force in early rock and roll." His works and...
.

A Lubbock, Texas
Lubbock, Texas

Lubbock is an United States of America city in the U.S. state of Texas. Located in the West Texas part of the state, a region known historically as the Llano Estacado, it is the county seat of Lubbock County, Texas, and the home of Texas Tech University....
 baseball team in the Texas-Louisiana League were called the Lubbock Crickets
Lubbock Crickets

The Lubbock Crickets were a minor league baseball team that played in Lubbock, Texas. They were a member of the Texas-Louisiana League . The team was named after Buddy Holly's band, The Crickets....
, named after hometown hero Buddy Holly's band.

Taxonomy

African
Subfamilies of the family Gryllidae:

  • Eneopterinae — (true) bush crickets
  • Gryllinae — common or field cricket
    Field cricket

    Field crickets are insects of Order Orthoptera. These crickets are in subfamily Gryllinae of Family Gryllidae.They hatch in Spring , and the young Cricket eat and grow rapidly....
    s; brown or black; despite the name, some of them enter houses (e.g. Acheta domesticus, the house cricket)
  • Nemobiinae — ground crickets
  • Oecanthinae — tree cricket
    Tree cricket

    Tree crickets are insects of Order Orthoptera. These cricket are in the subfamily Oecanthinae of the Family Gryllidae.They live in trees and shrubs, for which they are well camouflaged....
    s; usually green with broad, transparent wings; frequent trees and shrubs.
  • Phalangopsinae
  • Podoscirtinae — anomalous crickets
  • Pteroplistinae
  • Trigonidiinae — sword-tail cricket
    Sword-tail cricket

    The sword-tail crickets are insects of the Order Orthoptera, in which they belong to the suborder Ensifera like all true Cricket . They make up the subfamily Trigonidiinae....
    s


In addition to the above subfamilies in the family Gryllidae, several other orthopteran groups outside of this family also may be called "crickets":

  • Mogoplistidae — scaly crickets
  • Myrmecophilidae — ant cricket
    Ant cricket

    The ant crickets are rarely-encountered relatives of cricket s, and are obligate inquilines within ant nests. They are very small, wingless, and flattened, therefore resembling small cockroach nymph s....
    s
  • Mole cricket
    Mole cricket

    The mole crickets compose Family Gryllotalpidae, of thick-bodied insects about 3-5 cm long, with large beady compound eye and shovel-like arthropod leg highly developed for burrowing and swimming....
    s
  • Tettigoniidae
    Tettigoniidae

    The family Tettigoniidae, known in American English as katydids and in British English as bush-crickets, contains more than 6,400 species....
     - katydids or bush crickets
  • Cave crickets (also called camel crickets)
  • Sand crickets
  • Mormon cricket
    Mormon cricket

    The so-called Mormon cricket is actually a shieldbacked katydid, and not a cricket at all. Mormon crickets are large insects that can grow to almost three inches in length....
    s
  • Weta cricket
    Weta

    Weta is the name applied to about 70 insect species endemic to the New Zealand archipelago. There are many similar species around the World but most are in the southern hemisphere....
    s
  • Jerusalem cricket
    Jerusalem cricket

    Jerusalem crickets are a group of large , flightless insects native to the western United States, along the Pacific Coast, and south into Mexico....
    s
  • Parktown prawn
    Parktown prawn

    Parktown prawn is the familiar term South Africans use for Libanasidus vittatus, a monotypic king cricket species found in South Africa, belonging to the Anostostomatidae family....
    s


Gallery


Footnotes



See also

  • Insect fighting
    Insect fighting

    Insect fighting is a blood sport involving insects. It is practised in areas in China, Japan, and Thailand. There are people who train and fight their insects against other insects in underground fighting arenas....
  • Nematomorpha
    Nematomorpha

    Nematomorpha are a phylum of parasitic animals which are morphology and ecology similar to nematode worms, hence the name. They range in size from 1cm to 1 meter long, and 1 to 3 millimetres in diameter....
  • G. W. Pierce
    G. W. Pierce

    George Washington Pierce was an United States physicist. He was a professor of physics at Harvard University and inventor in the development of electronic telecommunications....


External links

  • An online field guide
  • on the UF
    University of Florida

    The University of Florida is a Public university land-grant university, sea grant colleges, Space grant colleges major research university located on a campus in Gainesville, Florida, in the United States....
     / IFAS
    Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

    The University of Florida?s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences is a federal-state-county partnership dedicated to developing knowledge in agriculture, human and natural resources, and the life sciences, and enhancing and sustaining the quality of human life by making that information accessible....
     Featured Creatures Web site
  • on the UF
    University of Florida

    The University of Florida is a Public university land-grant university, sea grant colleges, Space grant colleges major research university located on a campus in Gainesville, Florida, in the United States....
     / IFAS
    Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

    The University of Florida?s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences is a federal-state-county partnership dedicated to developing knowledge in agriculture, human and natural resources, and the life sciences, and enhancing and sustaining the quality of human life by making that information accessible....
     Featured Creatures Web site
  • on the UF
    University of Florida

    The University of Florida is a Public university land-grant university, sea grant colleges, Space grant colleges major research university located on a campus in Gainesville, Florida, in the United States....
     / IFAS
    Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

    The University of Florida?s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences is a federal-state-county partnership dedicated to developing knowledge in agriculture, human and natural resources, and the life sciences, and enhancing and sustaining the quality of human life by making that information accessible....
     Featured Creatures Web site
  • WhyFiles.org