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  2. Tridactylidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tridactylidae

    The plates also may aid jumping on land, which Tridactylidae certainly can do impressively. The posterior tibiae also bear articulated spines near their tips, plus spurs longer than the hind tarsi, which may be entirely absent or else are at best vestigial, having only a single segment. The insect uses its hind tibial spurs for digging, which ...

  3. Orthoptera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthoptera

    Orthoptera (from Ancient Greek ὀρθός (orthós) 'straight' and πτερά (pterá) 'wings') is an order of insects that comprises the grasshoppers, locusts, and crickets, including closely related insects, such as the bush crickets or katydids and wētā.

  4. Cricket (insect) - Wikipedia

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

    The Crickets was the name of Buddy Holly's rock and roll band; [63] Holly's home town baseball team in the 1990s was called the Lubbock Crickets. [64] Cricket is the name of a US children's literary magazine founded in 1973; it uses a cast of insect characters.

  5. 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]

  6. Gryllus veletis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllus_veletis

    Gryllus veletis is abundant throughout eastern North America. [1] It ranges from southern Canada to northern Georgia, and as far west as Washington and Oregon [1] G. veletis occurs in the same areas as G. pennsylvanicus but the spring field cricket does not reach as far north as Nova Scotia, Canada. [1]

  7. Foreign crickets invade US basements - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2014/09/03/foreign-crickets...

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  8. Anostostomatidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anostostomatidae

    Anostostomatidae is a family of insects in the order Orthoptera, widely distributed in the southern hemisphere. [1] It is named Mimnermidae or Henicidae in some taxonomies, and common names include king crickets in Australia and South Africa, and wētā in New Zealand (although not all wētā are in Anostostomatidae).

  9. Wētā - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wētā

    Wētā is a loanword, from the Māori-language word wētā, which refers to this whole group of large insects; some types of wētā have a specific Māori name. [2] In New Zealand English, it is spelled either "weta" or "wētā", although the form with macrons is increasingly common in formal writing, as the Māori word weta (without macrons) instead means "filth or excrement". [3]