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  2. Milk snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_snake

    Young milk snakes typically eat crickets and other insects, slugs, and earthworms; [17] in the western U.S., juveniles also feed on small lizards and other young snakes. [9] [18] Adults' diet is primarily small mammals, but frequently includes lizards (especially skinks). [2]

  3. Rhaphidophoridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhaphidophoridae

    Most cave crickets have very large hind legs with "drumstick-shaped" femora and equally long, thin tibiae, and long, slender antennae. The antennae arise closely and next to each other on the head. They are brownish in color and rather humpbacked in appearance, always wingless, and up to 5 cm (2.0 in) long in body and 10 cm (3.9 in) for the legs.

  4. Andean milk snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andean_milk_snake

    Like all snakes, Andean milk snakes are carnivores. Young milk snakes mostly eat insects, while larger milk snakes eat small mammals, birds, eggs, amphibians, and other reptiles, including venomous snakes. Like most snakes, milk snakes only need to eat once every one or two weeks.

  5. Grylloidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grylloidea

    Grylloidea is the superfamily of insects, in the order Orthoptera, known as crickets. It includes the " true crickets ", scaly crickets , wood crickets and many other subfamilies, now placed in six extant families; some genera are only known from fossils.

  6. Know your WA snakes: How to avoid a venomous bite, and what ...

    www.aol.com/news/know-wa-snakes-avoid-venomous...

    Small garter snakes eat prey such as slugs and earthworms, but larger garter snakes eat birds, fish, amphibians and rodents. The common garter snake species is often found in mountainous areas ...

  7. Gryllidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllidae

    The family Gryllidae contains the subfamilies and genera which entomologists now term true crickets.Having long, whip-like antennae, they belong to the Orthopteran suborder Ensifera, which has been greatly reduced in the last 100 years (e.g. Imms [3]): taxa such as the tree crickets, spider-crickets and their allies, sword-tail crickets, wood or ground crickets and scaly crickets have been ...

  8. Common garden skink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_garden_skink

    The common garden skink feeds on invertebrates, including crickets, moths, slaters, earthworms, flies, grubs and caterpillars, grasshoppers, cockroaches, earwigs, slugs, dandelions, small spiders, ladybeetles and many other small insects, which makes it a very helpful animal around the garden.

  9. Cricket (insect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket_(insect)

    Crickets are orthopteran insects which are related to bush crickets, and, more distantly, to grasshoppers. In older literature, such as Imms , [ 3 ] "crickets" were placed at the family level ( i.e. Gryllidae ), but contemporary authorities including Otte now place them in the superfamily Grylloidea . [ 1 ]