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Tree cricket | |
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The snowy tree cricket, Oecanthus fultoni | |
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Subfamily: | Oecanthinae Kirby, 1906
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Tree crickets are insects of order Orthoptera. These crickets are in the subfamily Oecanthinae of the family Gryllidae.
They live in trees and shrubs, for which they are well camouflaged. Like other species of cricket they produce their calling song by rubbing the ridges of their wings together. The chirp (or trill) of a tree cricket is long and continuous and can sometimes be mistaken for the call of a cicada or certain species of frogs.
Tree crickets are omnivorous, and are known to feed on plant parts, other insects (scale, aphids), and even fungi.[1] Eggs are laid in the fall, in a series of small holes drilled into the bark. After remaining dormant for the winter, the eggs hatch in the spring and the young tree crickets begin feeding on aphids. They may go through as many as twelve molts before reaching maturity around mid summer.
{{Orthoptera-stub}} Category:Crickets
References
[edit]- ^ "Texas A&M page on the Tree Cricket". Retrieved 2009-13-01.
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Gryllus pennsylvanicus | |
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Gryllus pennsylvanicus | |
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Species: | G. pennsylvannicus
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Binomial name | |
Gryllus pennsylvannicus Burmeister, 1838
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Gryllus pennsylvanicus is one of many cricket species known as the Field cricket. It occurs throughout eastern North America and southern Canada.