| House Crickets
normally live outdoors especially in garbage dumps, preferring
warm weather, but will move indoors when it gets colder usually
in late summer. Overwintering occurs outdoors in the egg stage.
Each female can lay an average of 728 eggs with the immature
(nymphs) resembling the adults except being wingless. Nymphs
molt seven to eight times and reach adulthood in about 60 days.
Also, these crickets can live indoors, completing their life
cycle with eggs laid in cracks, crevices and other dark areas
such as behind baseboards.
Adults are very
attracted to lights, and become active at night (hide during the
day) to crawl, jump or fly sometimes in countless numbers up the
sides of houses, entering openings of even second and third
story windows and roof skylights. The continued, monotonous
"chirp" is loud and distracting, resulting in lost
sleep. They will feed on silk, woolens, nylon, rayon and wood.
They can bite when handled carelessly. They are found in fields,
pastures, lawns, roadsides and in woods.
Field Crickets
overwinter as eggs or nymphs in moist, firm soil. Each female
lays between 150 to 400 eggs which hatch in the spring. Nymphs
resemble adults except are smaller and wingless, molt eight to
nine times and reach adulthood in about 90 days. They are
serious agricultural pests feeding on many crop plants. They
become household pests in late summer and early fall when they
move out of fields and into buildings. They can damage
furniture, rugs and clothing and the "chirping" of
adult males can be irritating. They are readily attracted to
lights, can fly and are often found around dumpsters. Large
swarms may invade well-lighted areas covering streets and the
sides of buildings black with crickets. They feed on nylon,
wood, plastic fabrics, thin rubber goods and leather. Outbreaks
occur when rainfall follows a period of drought.
There are many
different kinds and sizes of field crickets, none of which are
able to survive and reproduce in buildings. They are found
outdoors in similar places as are house crickets, especially
under stones or boards, entering cool, moist basements in hot
summers.
Ground
Crickets act similar to field crickets except are smaller,
overwinter as eggs, are largely active at night and attracted to
lights. They occur in pastures, lawns and wooded areas.
Snowy Tree
Crickets occur in trees, shrubs, weeds and high grass and
are excellent singers, chirping at a regular rate varying with
the temperature. Eggs are laid in the bark or stems of fruit and
ornamental plants, often seriously damaging the twigs during the
process of egg laying. Eggs are laid in pin-size holes (usually
in single rows), sometimes injuring brambles of bush fruits.
Overwintering eggs hatch in the spring with nymphs maturing in
late summer. Apple, peach, plum, prune, cherry and berries are
food hosts.
Camel Crickets
are active at night in cool, damp, dark areas and
occasionally invading damp basements or crawlspaces. They are
not attracted to lights nor produce songs. Overwintering occurs
as nymphs or adults in protected places. They may be found
living in large numbers, causing alarm. Some textiles may be
damaged. Some hide under hay bales, feeding on other insects
seeking shelter there. Most are found in caves, hollow trees,
under logs and stones and in other dark, moist places. They can
live and reproduce indoors.
Northern Mole
Crickets spend most of their life burrowing in the soil,
coming to the surface as the soil is wet or flooded with rain.
They are not often pests, but sometimes enter basements or
homes. They fly to lights during their spring mating period.
Females lay eggs in the soil (35 eggs per cell). Eggs hatch in
10 to 40 days with adulthood reached by autumn. They feed on
roots, tubers and underground stems of grasses, strawberries,
vegetables, etc. Mole crickets overwinter as adults in the soil.
There are special
songs for courtship, fighting and sounding an alarm. The
principle role is to bring the sexes together with different
songs in different species. Male crickets stridulate or
"sing" by rubbing a sharp edge (the scraper) at the
base of one front wing along a filelike ridge (the file) on the
bottom side of the other front wing, resulting in a series of
"chirps." The number of chirps varies with the
temperature with more (faster) chirping at higher temperatures.
Chirps vary from four to five to more than 200 per second. The
song is amplified by the wing surface.
Smoke detectors
or alarms occasionally give off cricket "chirp-like"
sounds. This mechanical chirping is a signal repeated at regular
intervals, both during the day and night, warning that the
battery is weak and needs replaced. After learning the source,
homeowners are relieved and "embarrassed" for blaming
crickets for the noise.
Crickets are
usually active at night (nocturnal), prefer shelter in cracks
and crevices and invade homes seeking moisture. An occasional
cricket or two in the home usually presents no serious problem.
They are seldom serious pests in the home.
Sanitation is the
most important means of eliminating nuisance crickets. Keep all
areas in and around buildings free of moisture, dense vegetation
and weeds (1 foot band next to foundation). Mow lawns, cut
weeds, and clean up garbage collection areas. Remove harborage
sites such as piles of bricks, stones, rotting wood and other
debris. Caulk and seal all cracks and crevices, especially near
the ground level at basement windows and doorways. When the
structure is brick and weep holes are present weep
hole vents is the best product for excluding all crawling
pest including rodents. Also your weep holes will still vent as
intended.
Make sure that
all windows and doors are tight-fitting with proper screening in
place. Exclusion is an important
factor as well as light discipline. Avoid bright mercury vapor
lights in entryways and along structure perimeters since
crickets will be attracted from far distances. Convert to sodium
vapor yellow lights (less attractive to insects) instead of
white, neon or mercury vapor lights.
Never store
firewood next to the house foundation. Raise garbage cans off
the ground if practical. Trash and dumpsters should be placed as
far from the building as possible. Crickets are attracted to
food in these areas. Crickets may be troublesome at trash dumps,
grassy roadsides, pasture fields and wooded areas (breeding
sites) before entering structures. Crickets indoors can be
captured on insect traps
Heavy cricket
migrations are hard to control. It may be necessary to use
contact insecticides LIQUID
CRICKET SPRAY both inside and outside the home. Indoors,
apply to cracks and crevices, baseboards, in closets, under
stairways, around fireplaces, in basements and other hiding
places. Use ECO PCO Dust
or Aerosols
Outdoors, when
populations are large, treat around the foundation with ECO
PCO Dust or
Baits.
The
named brand products mentioned in the control measures are not a
recommendation of Ohio University or William F. Lyon
Ohio
State University Extension Fact Sheet
Entomology
William F. Lyon
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