MySheen

The difference between crickets and crickets

Published: 2024-11-22 Author: mysheen
Last Updated: 2024/11/22, The difference between crickets and crickets

There is no difference between crickets and crickets, crickets are crickets, crickets are crickets, but they are called differently. Crickets are invertebrates of the family Orthoptera crickets, also known as promoting weaving, commonly known as crickets, night bugs, general insects, autumn worms, cockfighting, promoting weaving, trend weaving, ground trumpet, cooking chicken, Sun Wang, soil sting and so on. "monk" is a term for crickets before their wings, and it is an ancient insect with a history of at least 140 million years.

Most of the crickets are small and medium-sized, and a few are large. Yellowish brown to dark brown. Round head, wide chest and slender antennae. Chewing mouthparts. Some have developed jaws, which are better than bite fights. There are 3 pairs of tarsus of each foot, and the forefoot and middle foot are similar and of the same length. The hind feet are well developed, and they are good at jumping. The hearing organ on the tibial segment of the forefoot is larger on the outside than on the inside. There is a pair of tail hairs at the ventral end of both male and female. The male ventral end has a pair of short rod-shaped abdominal thorns. The female is larger, with needle-shaped or spear-shaped oviposition tube bare and small wings. The male worm has a sound generator on the front wing, which is composed of a scraping blade on the wing vein, a friction vein and a voice mirror. The front wings are raised and rubbed from side to side to vibrate the voice mirror and produce tones.

The reproduction of crickets goes through the process of egg-nymph-adult and belongs to incomplete metamorphosis. There is a spawning tube at the end of the cricket's abdomen, which is inserted into the soil when laying eggs. Common crickets occur once a year to overwinter with their eggs in the soil. The eggs are laid per unit area in the weedy and sunny ridges, graveyards, and the soil at the edge of the haystack. The overwintering eggs were laid in October and hatched into nymphs from April to May the following year. The peanut larva has one generation a year in Guangxi, the nymph overwintered in the soil hole, and was unearthed from March to April the following year, harming peanut seedlings. Newly hatched nymphs live in groups, go out to find food a few days later, and dig their own holes. It feathered into an adult in the first ten days of June and continued to do harm.

Cricket nymphs molt 6 times (6 ages), each time 3-4 days, and it takes 20-25 days to emerge into adults. The life span of adults is 141-151 days. Adults and nymphs live in burrows as deep as 0.6 meters or more. The new cave is simple, with only one escape hole. Three or five additional branch holes for spawning were built before spawning, and the tender stems, leaves and seeds of peanut were searched and transported back to the hole for storage for raising newly hatched nymphs.

Crickets live in caves, often living on the surface, under bricks and stones, in soil caves, and among grass. Night activities, omnivorous, eat a variety of crops, saplings, vegetables and fruits, etc. Some behaviors of crickets can be induced by specific external stimuli. They are withdrawn by nature, generally live independently, and are never allowed to live with other crickets (males also live with another female during mating), so they cannot tolerate each other and bite and fight once they meet each other. A male cricket can live with multiple females.

 
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