Category Archives: Crickets, Camel Crickets and Mole Crickets   rss

Camel Cricket

Bug jumps sideways and is very aggresive
December 13, 2009
Saw this bug in our garage in Boonville Mo. We have seen three of them in the last month. They look like a crossbrede between a grasshopper and a spider and are very aggressive it tried to attack my wife
John Schaefer
Boonville, Mo.

camel cricket john 300x184 Camel Cricket

Camel Cricket

Dear John,
Though it looks frightening, the Camel Cricket is perfectly harmless.  Camel Crickets are also called Cave Crickets, and they like damp, dark places like basements where they will feed on a variety of things, including cloth and newspaper.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Mole Cricket from Iraq

What the hell is this?
December 2, 2009
I took this picture in March of 2008 when I was in Iraq and this thing was just plain nasty. It’s about the size of my thumb (length and width). That is in fact rat droppings around it and it’s obviously somewhat of a bottomfeeder. Do you guys know what this thing is?
Ryan Luddy
Haditha Dam, Iraq

mole cricket iraq ryan 300x223 Mole Cricket from Iraq

Mole Cricket

Hi Ryan,
Though your photo is from Iraq, it is worth noting that we get submissions of Mole Crickets from around the world.

Update
After being severely chastised by one of our readers in a comment, we have decided to try to make things right.  Mole Crickets are subterranean diggers that can also fly.  They eat plant roots, and they do not feed on rat droppings since they are not scavengers.

Mole Cricket

Wierd Bug in eastern NC
November 19, 2009
I am trying to figure out what this is. I have only seen one other like it. Up close, it looks like it has a lobsters head, mole paws and the features of a grasshopper. Soo strange. What is it and what does it do/eat?
Dawn
Eastern NC

mole cricket dawn 300x134 Mole Cricket

Mole Cricket

Hi Dawn,
This is a Mole Cricket, so your description of the mole paws is quite accurate.  Additionally, Mole Crickets are in the same insect order as Grasshoppers, and since they are both Orthopterans, that observation was also quite keen.  Mole Crickets are subterranean diggers.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Is this bug friend or foe?
6:08 AM
October 30, 2009
I foud this on my house and did not want to kill a beneficial insect. It is approx 2 inches long.
M Brienza
Wyckoff, NJ 07481

please disregard previous message
6:19 AM
a form has been submitted on October 30, 2009
Hello Bugman,
In my haste to identify the insect i just submitted, I dug a lit deeper into your site (which is excellent by the way) and found that I have a two-spotted tree cricket.
Don’t want to waste your valuable time!
Thanks & keep up the good work!
M Brienza
Wyckoff, NJ 07481

tree cricket m 300x239 Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Dear M,
WE are quite impressed that you managed to identify your Two Spotted Tree Cricket, Neoxabea bipunctata,
in 11 minutes and write back to inform us.  We love Tree Crickets and enjoy hearing their musical serenades at night.  Readers who want more information may find it on BugGuide.

Camel Cricket

Camel Cricket–alive and kicking!
October 26, 2009
Hi WTB–
My cat was harassing this cool bug as it tried to hide out under our baseboard radiator. (We had a Western Conifer Seed Bug in the same area the other day–I think they come in through the track of the sliding door nearby.) At first I thought it was a regular cricket. When I went to rescue it, I found that it something else entirely. I caught it under a glass, snapped a few pictures, and then tossed it back outside into the cool and rainy evening.
The more I looked at this bug, the cooler it seemed to be. I guess it’s a female based on those three huge prongs on her back end. Such a great and complex face! So many little barbs and stickers! Amazing three-toed feet! She was pretty cooperative with the photo session–she mostly held still, except she groomed her long antennae using her paddle-like facial appendages (are those called palps?).
JJR
Setauket, NY (North Shore of Long Island)

camel cricket jjr 253x300 Camel Cricket

Camel Cricket

Dear JJR,
Since we recently posted an image of dead Camel Crickets caught in a sticky trap, your photo is much more welcomed.  We believe the mouthpart to which you refer is the maxillary palpus or feeler.  Seems she is covered in hair and dust and needs to do a bit of grooming.

camel cricket cu jjr 299x300 Camel Cricket

Camel Cricket

Camel Crickets caught in glue traps for mice

Large Cricket Like Bug
October 24, 2009
Here I’ve found a large cricket like bug with really long antennae. The actual body of the bug looks to be about 1/2 inch to 3/4 inch in length (not counting the legs or antennae. They seem to gravitate towards mice glue traps. Any help regarding these guys would be greatly appreciated.
Regards
Suffern, NY (NorthEast U.S.)

camel crickets glue trap 300x216 Camel Crickets caught in glue traps for mice

Camel Crickets caught in glue traps for mice

These are Camel Crickets or Cave Crickets.  They need dark, damp locations to live and reproduce.  Indoors, they are found in basements where they may eat paper and fabric.  Though we don’t normally provide extermination advice, many of our readers ask how to rid their homes of Camel Crickets.  Your photo says it all.

camel cricket glue trap 300x193 Camel Crickets caught in glue traps for mice

Camel Cricket in Glue Trap

Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Third try for pink/red grasshopper
September 23, 2009
We found this grasshopper inside our WV house in late October– I haven’t found it on your site, or elsewhere, and I think it’s very pretty! Can you help?
Jessica
Morgantown, WV

smooth legged tree cricket jessica 300x277 Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Hi Jessica,
Thanks for your persistence.  We wish we had the time to answer all of our mail, especially since we realize how very important it is to our readership to have their letter recognized and perhaps even posted online.  This appears to be a Smooth Legged Tree Cricket in the genus Neoxabea, the Two Spotted Tree Cricket, Neoxabea bipunctata.  According to BugGuide, your specimen is a male which is described as:  “The male is a paler color — red tinged head and pronotum, pale pink-tinged wings and pale flesh-toned limbs.  The male Neoxabea is the only TC male whose wings wrap down the sides of the body (like those of the female) — Oecanthus species males have paddle-shaped wings that lay atop their body.
“  BugGuide also indicates:  “Males sing mostly at night: a 10-second trill followed by several seconds of silence, then a trill again. After mating, male hangs downward from foliage, allowing female to hang on beneath and dine on secretions from his thorax (1).

smooth legged tree cricket jessica cu 300x158 Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Two Spotted Tree Cricket

Thank you so much!  I’m glad my persistence paid off and didn’t come off as pestering.

We appreciate that you actually sent your information as well as attaching the photos on your subsequent submissions.  Often people will just send a followup query with no photos and we cannot take the time to search the mailbox for their original letters.

Cricket

Unidintified cricket possibly a hoplosphyrum boreale?
September 23, 2009
I just sent you a couple of pictures and asked you to identify a cricket that wasn’t a field cricket. I poked around online and found a description that fit. I couldn’t find a picture. “females are scaly and wingless” “common scaly cricket”? What do you think?
bugbarb
Chantry Flat, Angeles National Forest, California

cricket barb 224x300 Cricket

Cricket

Unknown cricket species, not a field cricket.
September 23, 2009
I have a healthy family of field crickets which I have raised from eggs laid by a single mother. Occasionally, I put in immature field crickets that I find in my yard. One such cricket has turned out to not be a field cricket. She has not grown at all and has fully developed ovipositor. She is brown, and has some dark horizontal bands. I have had her for over a month and she still doesn’t have wings that I can see. I have never seen this type of cricket before. I live at 2,200 feet elevation in Big Santa Anita Canyon in Angeles National Forest. Our canyon is one of the few places the recent Station Fire hasn’t burned. I find many interesting bugs in my yard because of the location.
Bugbarb
Chantry Flat, Angeles National Forest, California

cricket barb 2 300x247 Cricket

Cricket

Hi Bugbarb,
Based on two images from Southern California posted to BugGuide, we believe you have properly identified this Cricket as Hoplosphyrum boreale.


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