Friday 18 December 2009

Crickets

I was heartened to read that while wet weather is not good for crickets, this is offset to some extent by many cricket species having eggs that take two to three years to hatch – effectively sitting out the bad weather years. Apparently, house crickets, which were once only found indoors, are now increasingly found outside in large colonies on landfill sites where they are protected from the cold by the heat from the decaying waste. Worldwide there are 900 species of cricket, but we only have 29 here in England and Wales. Crickets are omnivores feeding on decaying plant material, fungi, seedling plants, and their own dead. Their eggs hatch in spring and one fertile female can produce two thousand offspring.

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