安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Gryllidae - Wikipedia
The family Gryllidae contains the subfamilies and genera which entomologists now term true crickets
- Family Gryllidae – ENT 425 – General Entomology
By rubbing their wings together, they can create a musical tone that is used to attract or warn another cricket With a three-segmented tarsi and long antennae, they are a distinctive family of Orthoptera Order: Orthoptera
- Gryllidae - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Gryllidae is defined as a family of insects commonly known as true crickets, encompassing over 1100 species and more than 100 genera, characterized by stocky bodies, globular heads, thick legs, and well-developed wings
- Family Gryllidae - True Crickets - BugGuide. Net
English cricket is from Middle English creket, that from Old French crequet The ultimate origin is onomatopoeic, imitative of the sound made by these animals (1)
- Gryllidae - bugswithmike. com
Gryllidae, commonly known as crickets, are a family of insects within the order Orthoptera They are closely related to grasshoppers and katydids, sharing the characteristic of producing sounds by stridulation, where they rub parts of their body together
- Gryllidae - Animalia
The type genus is Gryllus and the first use of the family name "Gryllidae" was by Francis Walker They have a worldwide distribution (except Antarctica) The largest members of the family are the 5 cm (2 in)-long bull crickets (Brachytrupes) which excavate burrows a metre or more deep
- Cricket | Insect Behavior Adaptations | Britannica
Cricket, (family Gryllidae), any of approximately 2,400 species of leaping insects (order Orthoptera) that are worldwide in distribution and known for the musical chirping of the male
- A review of Gryllidae (Grylloidea) with the description of one new . . .
The classification of the Gryllidae has been established by Henri de Saussure in a remarkable monograph published in Geneva in the years 1877 and 1878 In this thorough work, the author points out the most important morphological characters and establishes the larger divisions of the group
|
|
|