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Image of Japanese Burrowing Cricket
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Japanese Burrowing Cricket

Velarifictorus (Velarifictorus) micado (Saussure 1877)

Distribution

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The Japanese Burrowing Cricket (Velarifictorus micado) is native to Asia but was introduced to the United States, where it was first recorded in 1959, from Alabama (Alexander and Walker 1962). By the mid-1970s, it was widely (if patchily) established in the southeastern states and the District of Columbia (Walker 1977). It is now found from New Jersey south to Florida.

(Alexander and Walker 1962; Walker 1977)

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Brief Summary

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The Japanese Burrowing Cricket (Velarifictorus micado) was introduced from Asia to the United States, where it was first recorded in 1959, from Alabama (Alexander and Walker 1962). By the mid-1970s, it was widely (if patchily) established in the southeastern states and the District of Columbia (Walker 1977). It is now found from New Jersey south to Florida. Japanese Burrowing Crickets can be heard calling, often from the mouth of a burrow, around the grassy edges of fields, woods, and freshwater wetlands. They are often present in suburban habitats as well. The initial spread of this species may have been facilitated by the transport of ornamental plants from infested nurseries.

This small, dark brown field cricket (13 to 19 mm long) has a head that is not much wider than the pronotum (in contrast to the head of the Eastern Striped Cricket, Miogryllus saussurei, which has a head that is noticeably wider than the pronotum). The tegmina cover around three quarters of the pronotum in males, half the abdomen in females. There are seven or fewer ragged pale longitudinal stripes extending forward on the top of the head from the front margin of the pronotum. A pale transverse band connects the lateral ocelli and the pronotal disk has pale spots or blotches. The palpi are pearly white. Other eastern U.S. field crickets (subfamily Gryllinae) of similar size have dingy palps and lack the stripes and band on the head. The female's ovipositor is slightly longer than the abdomen and tilted upward.

The calling song of the Japanese Burrowing Cricket is a rapid series of chirps, similar to that of the Fall and Spring Field Crickets (Gryllus pennsylvanicus and G. veletis) but faster and more even, delivered at a rate of around 4 chirps per second.The calling songs of other eastern field crickets delivering several chirps per second have a less regular chirp rate.

Japanese Burrowing Crickets prefer moist habitats and sometimes make burrows, moving soil a mouthful at a time. There is a single annual generation in North America, with adults present from August through October.

(Capinera et al. 2004; Himmelman 2009)

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Habitat

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Japanese Burrowing Crickets (Velarifictorus micado) prefer moist habitats, e.g., around the grassy edges of fields, woods, and freshwater wetlands, as well as some suburban habitats.

(Capinera et al. 2004; Himmelman 2009)

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Leo Shapiro
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Behavior

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The calling song of the Japanese Burrowing Cricket (Velarifictorus micado) is a rapid series of chirps, similar to that of the Fall and Spring Field Crickets (Gryllus pennsylvanicus and G. veletis) with which it co-ccurs in the southeastern United States, but faster and more even, delivered at a rate of around 4 chirps per second.The calling songs of other eastern U.S. field crickets delivering several chirps per second have a less regular chirp rate.

These crickets often calls from the mouths of burrows they construct, moving soil a mouthful at a time.

(Capinera et al. 2004; Himmelman 2009)

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Life Cycle

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In their introduced range in the southeastern United States, Japanese Burrowing Crickets (Velarifictorus micado) have a single annual generation, with adults present from August through October (Capinera et al. 2004).

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Morphology

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The Japanese Burowing Cricket (Velarifictorus micado) is a small, dark brown field cricket (13 to 19 mm long) with a head that is not much wider than the pronotum. The tegmina cover around three quarters of the pronotum in males, half the abdomen in females. There are seven or fewer ragged pale longitudinal stripes extending forward on the top of the head from the front margin of the pronotum. A pale transverse band connects the lateral ocelli and the pronotal disk has pale spots or blotches. The palpi are pearly white. The female's ovipositor is slightly longer than the abdomen and tilted upward.

(Capinera et al. 2004; Himmelman 2009)

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Leo Shapiro
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Look Alikes

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In its introduced range in the southeastern United States, Japanese Burrowing Crickets (Velarifictorus micado) bear some resemblance to several other crickets. This small, dark brown field cricket (13 to 19 mm long) has a head that is not much wider than the pronotum (in contrast to the head of the Eastern Striped Cricket, Miogryllus saussurei, which has a head that is noticeably wider than the pronotum). The tegmina cover around three quarters of the pronotum in males, half the abdomen in females. There are seven or fewer ragged pale longitudinal stripes extending forward on the top of the head from the front margin of the pronotum. A pale transverse band connects the lateral ocelli and the pronotal disk has pale spots or blotches. The palpi are pearly white. Other eastern U.S. field crickets (subfamily Gryllinae) of similar size have dingy palps and lack the stripes and band on the head.

license
cc-by-3.0
copyright
Leo Shapiro
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EOL authors