common name: southwestern field cricket
scientific name: Gryllus texensis Cade & Otte (Insecta: Orthoptera: Gryllidae)

Introduction - Distribution - Identification - Life Cycle - Habitat - Song - Selected References

Introduction

This cricket is a southwestern species that occurs in Florida only west of the Apalachicola River. It is so similar to the southeastern field cricket that currently the two must chiefly be separated by their songs and that with difficulty. It has only recently been formally named, but where it occurs without its southeastern relative, it has been intensively studied under the name of "Gryllus integer," a name that properly belongs to a species that occurs in southern California east to western Texas.

Other Florida field and house crickets.

Distribution

The southwestern field cricket occurs from western Florida west to western Texas.

Identification

The southwestern field cricket cannot be distinguished from the southeastern field cricket except by analysis of the pulse rate of the male’s calling song (=wingstroke rate during the trill). At 77°F the southwestern field cricket has a pulse rate that is greater than 62. If the two species are singing at the same time and place, a trained ear can identify the crickets that are trilling at the faster pulse rate as southwestern field crickets

long-winged male

short-winged female

Life Cycle

This species has two generations a year with late-summer and fall adults producing overwintering juveniles that become adults in spring of the following year. In western Florida, the fall generation has been intensively studied, but a spring generation has yet to be detected.

Habitat

This species occurs in lawns, pastures, and roadsides and is often attracted to light in numbers.

Song

This and the southeastern field cricket are the only Florida field crickets that trill — that is, they produce long-continued sequences of sound pulses that correspond to wing closures. Thecalling song (692 Kb wav file) of the southwestern field cricket has pulses at a higher rate than the southeastern one, and the trills may be interrupted more often and more regularly (graphs).

Selected References


Author: Thomas J. Walker, University of Florida
Photographs: Paul M. Choate, University of Florida
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-68
Publication Date: January 1999
Copyright 1999 University of Florida

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