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Definition of field cricket in English: field cricketnoun A European cricket that lives in a burrow in grassland and has a musical birdlike chirp. Gryllus campestris, family Gryllidae Example sentencesExamples - In field crickets, an increased number of partners resulted in increased hatching success.
- To approximate natural food sources of S. invicta, adult field crickets, killed by freezing, were used as the principal source of food.
- In the study, female field crickets that mated only with siblings hatched significantly fewer eggs than females who mated with non-relatives, which is what the researchers had expected.
- In an era that preceded air conditioning they took refuge at night on the enclosed sleeping porch at the front of the house, perfecting their storytelling skills and nodding off amidst the din of field crickets.
- In field crickets, recently defeated males have a higher than expected probability of losing subsequent fights.
- Now fat, brown field crickets are making night music, strumming their forewings like violins in hope of attracting a mate.
- The field cricket, Gryllus sp. has a relatively large body, with chewing mouthparts for feeding primarily on vegetation.
- Although cave crickets might look similar to the field cricket, they are from a different family.
- Both female field crickets and the larviparous parasitoid flies Ormia ochracea (Diptera, Tachinidae, Ormiini) rely on acoustic cues to detect and find singing male crickets.
- Here I experimentally manipulate the courtship interactions of the field crickets Gryllus rubens and G. texensis to examine the potential of close-range courtship interactions to limit interspecific gene flow.
- Male field crickets on the Hawaiian island of Kauai have given up singing in order to survive.
- Until adulthood, spiders were fed ad libitum with laboratory reared field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus.
- Other species will follow shortly, including the Polynesian tree snail, the Fregate island beetle, which is considered critically endangered, and the British field cricket, of which fewer than 100 remain in the wild.
- For example, the sand field cricket and the southeastern field cricket look nearly identical and inhabit the same geographical areas.
- But we did capture and identify countless leafhoppers, field crickets, earwigs and cabbage butterflies.
- If the song of the autumn field cricket suddenly becomes louder, more rapid, and higher pitched, he's located a lady and is calling to her.
- Male Mediterranean field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus, fight over and defend territorial shelters and attract females by calling.
- Despite these disadvantages, by 2003 the field cricket population was thriving again - even though 90 percent of the males had lost the ability to solicit mates.
- We experimentally investigated the effect of food availability on body condition, calling behavior, and sexual attractiveness of male field crickets, Gryllus campestris, under natural conditions.
- Teleogryllus oceanicus is an Australian field cricket that has been introduced into Hawaii, where it is parasitized by the New World tachinid fly Ormia ochracea, also introduced into Hawaii.
Definition of field cricket in US English: field cricketnoun A European cricket that lives in a burrow in grassland and has a musical birdlike chirp. Family Gryllidae, numerous species Example sentencesExamples - But we did capture and identify countless leafhoppers, field crickets, earwigs and cabbage butterflies.
- Until adulthood, spiders were fed ad libitum with laboratory reared field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus.
- Teleogryllus oceanicus is an Australian field cricket that has been introduced into Hawaii, where it is parasitized by the New World tachinid fly Ormia ochracea, also introduced into Hawaii.
- Other species will follow shortly, including the Polynesian tree snail, the Fregate island beetle, which is considered critically endangered, and the British field cricket, of which fewer than 100 remain in the wild.
- To approximate natural food sources of S. invicta, adult field crickets, killed by freezing, were used as the principal source of food.
- Here I experimentally manipulate the courtship interactions of the field crickets Gryllus rubens and G. texensis to examine the potential of close-range courtship interactions to limit interspecific gene flow.
- If the song of the autumn field cricket suddenly becomes louder, more rapid, and higher pitched, he's located a lady and is calling to her.
- Male field crickets on the Hawaiian island of Kauai have given up singing in order to survive.
- In field crickets, an increased number of partners resulted in increased hatching success.
- Male Mediterranean field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus, fight over and defend territorial shelters and attract females by calling.
- Both female field crickets and the larviparous parasitoid flies Ormia ochracea (Diptera, Tachinidae, Ormiini) rely on acoustic cues to detect and find singing male crickets.
- Despite these disadvantages, by 2003 the field cricket population was thriving again - even though 90 percent of the males had lost the ability to solicit mates.
- For example, the sand field cricket and the southeastern field cricket look nearly identical and inhabit the same geographical areas.
- Although cave crickets might look similar to the field cricket, they are from a different family.
- We experimentally investigated the effect of food availability on body condition, calling behavior, and sexual attractiveness of male field crickets, Gryllus campestris, under natural conditions.
- In field crickets, recently defeated males have a higher than expected probability of losing subsequent fights.
- Now fat, brown field crickets are making night music, strumming their forewings like violins in hope of attracting a mate.
- In an era that preceded air conditioning they took refuge at night on the enclosed sleeping porch at the front of the house, perfecting their storytelling skills and nodding off amidst the din of field crickets.
- The field cricket, Gryllus sp. has a relatively large body, with chewing mouthparts for feeding primarily on vegetation.
- In the study, female field crickets that mated only with siblings hatched significantly fewer eggs than females who mated with non-relatives, which is what the researchers had expected.
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