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  2. Crickets as pets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crickets_as_pets

    The Fluker Cricket Farm in Louisiana exceeded $5,000,000 in annual sales in 2001 [91] and became a staple subject of American business school textbooks. [note 8] The zoos of the Old World breed Acheta domesticus, Gryllus bimaculatus, and Gryllus assimilis. Their cricket farms usually rotate four generation ("four crates") of insects.

  3. 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 ...

  4. Gryllus assimilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllus_assimilis

    At one time, many field crickets found in the eastern states of the United States were assumed to be a single species and were referred to as Gryllus assimilis.However, in 1932, the entomologist B. B. Fulton showed that four populations of field cricket in North Carolina, that were morphologically identical and which were all considered to be G. assimilis, produced four different songs.

  5. Gryllus campestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllus_campestris

    Gryllus campestris, the European field cricket or simply the field cricket in the British Isles, [2] is the type species of crickets in its genus and tribe Gryllini. These flightless dark colored insects are comparatively large; the males range from 19 to 23 mm and the females from 17 to 22 mm.

  6. Gryllus bimaculatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllus_bimaculatus

    Gryllus bimaculatus is a species of cricket in the subfamily Gryllinae.Most commonly known as the two-spotted cricket, [2] it has also been called the "African" or "Mediterranean field cricket", although its recorded distribution also includes much of Asia, including China and Indochina through to Borneo. [2]

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  8. Cricket (insect) - Wikipedia

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

    The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization has implemented a project in Laos to improve cricket farming and, consequently, food security. [55] The food conversion efficiency of house crickets (Acheta domesticus) is 1.7, some five times higher than that for beef cattle, and if their fecundity is taken into account, 15 to 20 times higher.

  9. House cricket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_cricket

    The house cricket is typically gray or brownish in color, growing to 16–21 millimetres (0.63–0.83 in) in length. Males and females look similar, but females will have a brown-black, needle-like ovipositor extending from the center rear, approximately the same length as the cerci, the paired appendages towards the rear-most segment of the cricket.