Image: Gilles San Martin |
No. You need legs. Long, long legs. Legs on stilts.
Image: Sarah Gregg |
It's not quite so obvious why another name for them is Camel Cricket. Although, yet another name is Camel-backed Cricket and yet another one is Humpbacked Cricket. So I guess that's it. They're hump-backed, like a camel hump. Although, to me they look less hump-backed and more like just a hump. Like a camel's hump grew legs and ran away. Maybe that's where llamas come from.
Image: Al and Marie You have nothing to fear but fear itself. Honest. |
They don't always jump away, either. Whether due to confusion, poor eyesight or a deep understanding of how the world sees them, Cave Crickets often make full use of their creepy, creepy crawliness and jump right at predators and any lumbering beasts who may blunder into them.
Video: gvr63
If its effect on humans is anything to go by, it seems to be an extremely effective strategy. Even the most ardent of insect lovers can be reduced to a trembling wreck after the startling leap of a big Cave Cricket. Some of these things can reach 5 cm (2 in) long, after all! And that doesn't include legs that can be twice as long as the rest of their body.
Cave Crickets are so big that in New Zealand they've become what we might call 'honorary Wetas'. They're not closely related to any of the other great, big crickets known as Wetas, but they're great, big crickets in their own right so they get called Cave Wetas.
Image: Jon Sullivan Cave Weta |
Many Cave Crickets live up to their name quite well. They like caves! There's even a genus called Troglophilus, which means 'cave lover'. Gotta love those caves! Especially if you're going to live in them. You can save a lot of money on holidays if you just love the cave you're living in.
Image: Bernard DUPONT |
Instead, Cave Crickets tend to have more of a 'cave's mouth look'. They escape the dangers of the daytime by delving into the cool, damp, darkness of their caves. Once night falls, they emerge to forage for food. They'll eat almost anything, from rot and fungus to the bodies of the dead, so they may find all they need at the entrance of the cave. If not, they'll happily walk out into the surrounding forest to feed.
In smaller caves, these adventurous crickets can end up being THE major bread-winner for the entire cave community. They go out, gather food (in their stomachs by eating it), bring it back home and deposit it in the form of droppings and dead bodies. Or themselves, if any cave spiders can catch them. Darn spiders. Is my faeces not good enough for you?
So Cave Crickets are very much at home in darkness but they still have some use for those eyeballs. Eye facets. But they also have use for long, feely legs and long, feely antennae, so they have those, too.
Image: David Illig Greenhouse Stone Cricket (Diestrammena asynamora) |
Do you have a basement? Is it damp and dark? Be honest! Is it full of mould and dead bodies? Come on, now. Tell the truth, Godammit! WHERE DID YOU HIDE THE BODIES?
Sorry, I got carried away there. But a damp, dark basement is good living for a Cave Cricket. They don't even have to stay there all the time. If there's a little hole somewhere that leads outside they can pop out every night to feed and come back before morning.
Video: lukesfarm
On the other hand, they may not even need to leave the basement to eat. After munching through the mould on the walls (you really should clean that place up) they may well turn their attention to any fabric, carpet or paper they can find.
But not all Cave Crickets are really CAVE Crickets...
Image: Patrick Alexander White Sand Treader (Ammobaenetes arenicolus) hanging out in White Sands, New Mexico |
They have much shorter, thicker legs than their spindly, cave-dwelling kin...
Image: Howard Ensign Evans, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org Giant Sand Treader (Daihinibaenetes giganteus) |
Why, you ask? Because it helps them dig through the sand! And why would they do that? Because its so much darker and damper beneath the surface than on it.
Image: Noah Charney |
At last, the true Camel Crickets!
4 comments:
I live in a basement, but I don't worry about crickets. I have spiders, yay! But so far I have been unable to train them to clean up the mold. Working on it.
Uh oh, sounds like your basement has a top heavy food chain!
Yay, cave weta! Even though they are weta pretenders, they are still pretty great, in my opinion.
Yup, great and big. Great, big crickets!
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