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🗓️ 15 July 2022
⏱️ 28 minutes
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How are crickets so loud? Why do they chirp at night? How are they different from grasshoppers? We’re talking crickets today with Karim Vahed, a cricket and katydid expert and entomologist (bug scientist) at the University of Derby in the United Kingdom. Professor Vahed also takes on some of your pressing insect questions: Do insects have bones? What do baby bugs like to do? Do insects drink water? Why are bugs so important?
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There are over 9,000 known species of crickets on the planet. These insects are best known for singing and hopping!
Insects are divided into different orders depending on what kind they are. Crickets are in the order known as Orthoptera, which contains grasshoppers, locusts, crickets and bush crickets, and katydids.
Crickets and grasshoppers are different! For one thing, most grasshoppers make noise by rubbing one of their legs against one of their wings. But most crickets make sound by rubbing their two forewings (their front wings) together. One wing is jagged, like a little row of teeth. And the other wing kind of scrapes up against it, making a sound.
The number of teeth on the scraper, the speed of the rubbing and how frequently they make the chirps differ depending on the species. So there are lots of different cricket songs.
Try an experiment: Get a comb and run your fingernail across it. See if you can make a sound. If you have more than one comb, or a comb with two differently sized/spaced teeth, see if they make different sounds. Does the size of the fingernail make a difference in the sound? Try giving your comb to an adult and find out!
In most cricket species, the males chirp to attract a female. And they mostly sing at night to help avoid predators.
But Karim Vahed says some studies have shown that predators like domestic house cats follow the chirps of the crickets to find and eat them!
Imagine a cricket the size of a hamster! A cricket so big it would cover the palm of your hand if you were holding it. The giant wētā [say it: WEH-tah] is that insect! There are several species of giant wētās. They all live in New Zealand and most of them are protected because they’re quite rare.
Insects are the most diverse group of animals on the planet. There are more than a million known species (about 80% of all known animals). But scientists estimate anywhere from 10 million to 80 million insect species have yet to be discovered!
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0:32.4 | This is But Why, a podcast for curious kids from Vermont Public. I'm Jane Lenton. On this show, we take the questions you tell us |
1:02.3 | to find answers to and we, well, we find answers. Here in the northern hemisphere where we're based, |
1:09.4 | it's the middle of summer and let me tell you, it is noisy. Even out here in the countryside where I live, |
1:19.3 | there are a lot of creatures making a lot of noise, particularly that one insect you just heard, |
1:25.1 | making a racket. Some of you also live with noisy neighbors that kind of bug you, get it? And today, |
1:32.9 | we're going to learn more about them. I'm a professor, Karim Vahead and I basically study insects. |
1:39.4 | So I'm an entomologist. Karim Vahead is a bug professor at the University of Derby in England. |
1:45.4 | And he's joining us today to answer some questions you've sent us about one particular type of insect. |
1:50.8 | Crickets. Professor Vahead is an expert in crickets and bush crickets. Did you know you could have a |
1:59.3 | career specializing in crickets? Well, Karim Vahead is living proof that you can. Before we get into |
2:06.3 | why they make so much noise and some other really cool things about crickets, we'd better start at the |
2:11.4 | beginning. What is a cricket? Crickets are a kind of all-foture. So the insects are divided to |
2:19.6 | numerous different kinds called orders. So one major order of insects are, for example, the beetles, |
2:25.8 | another major order of the butterflies and moths. But the order to which crickets belong is the |
2:31.0 | order or thoptra. Now the orthoptra contains the grasshoppers and locusts and also the crickets, |
2:38.2 | cateredids and bush crickets. Crickets are in a subgrouping which contains the crickets, |
2:44.8 | the cateredids or bush crickets and other groups like the wetters of New Zealand, for example. |
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