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  2. Gryllotalpa gryllotalpa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllotalpa_gryllotalpa

    Gryllotalpa gryllotalpa, commonly known as the European mole cricket, is widespread in Europe and has been introduced to the eastern United States. Its scientific name is derived from the Latin 'gryllus' ( cricket ); and 'talpa' ( mole ), because of the fine dense fur which covers it and its subterranean habits, [ 2 ] and because of the mole ...

  3. Mole cricket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_cricket

    Lifecycle of the [European] mole cricket, from Richard Lydekker's Royal Natural History, 1879. Mole crickets undergo incomplete metamorphosis; when nymphs hatch from eggs, they increasingly resemble the adult form as they grow and pass through a series of up to 10 moults. After mating, a period of 1–2 weeks may occur before the female starts ...

  4. Gryllotalpa vineae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gryllotalpa_vineae

    Gryllotalpa vineae is a species of mole cricket in the family Gryllotalpidae.It is found in southwestern Europe and was first described by the entomologists H. C. Bennet-Clark and Blaine H. Goodposts in 1970 after having realised that it must be a different species from the European mole cricket because of its distinctive song.

  5. List of Orthoptera species of Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Orthoptera_species...

    There are ten species of Orthoptera native to Ireland, seven grasshoppers and three bush-crickets. [1] A further species, the mole cricket, is thought to be possibly extirpated, given only one record from 1920. [2]

  6. New Zealand mole cricket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_mole_cricket

    The mole cricket was well known to Māori, who encountered it when cultivating garden plots and called it honi. [2] Mole crickets collected in New Zealand were assumed to be the European species Gryllotalpa vulgaris (a synonym of Gryllotalpa gryllotalpa), which has a wingless nymph that resembles the adult New Zealand species. [3]

  7. Cricket (insect) - Wikipedia

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

    Gryllotalpidae – mole crickets; Myrmecophilidae – ant crickets. Strictly, taxa in Infraorder Tettigoniidea and other superfamilies are excluded. Tettigoniidae – the bush crickets or katydids – which are quite distinct and unrelated, with 4-segmented tarsi (at least in the middle and hind legs) [3] and females with flattened ovipositors ...

  8. Grylloidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grylloidea

    The term cricket is popularly used for any cricket-like insect in the order Ensifera, being applied to the ant crickets, bush crickets (Tettigoniidae), Jerusalem crickets (Stenopelmatus), mole crickets, camel crickets and cave crickets (Rhaphidophoridae) and wētā (Anostostomatidae), and the relatives of these. All these insects have four ...

  9. European mole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Mole

    The European mole (Talpa europaea) is a mammal of the order Eulipotyphla. It is also known as the common mole and the northern mole. [3] This mole lives in a tunnel system, which it constantly extends. It uses these tunnels to hunt its prey. Under normal conditions, the displaced earth is pushed to the surface, resulting in the characteristic ...