Monday, December 18, 2023

Crickets and Katydids in the House 2023

 


 It’s time for my annual “Crickets and Katydids in the House” to close out another calendar year of Listening in Nature blog posts.  Although the indoor numbers are diminishing as these elderly insects gradually fade away, we’ve had another fascinating festival of singers this autumn.

As you can see, Nikos has been keeping an eye on the singers and their mesh butterfly cages in the dining room.  We have a pair of south windows there that both orthopterans and felines enjoy.

 

Does Nikos present problems for the insects? Not typically. In fact, I’ve repeatedly found him stretched out on their table next to their mesh cages, sound asleep. They sing regardless of his proximity.

Our distinguished guest this year was Michael Microcentrum (Microcentrum retinerve), a Lesser Angle-wing katydid from southern Ohio. This species is moving north from southern and central Ohio but is not in my immediate region – yet. I have recorded them as far north as the Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Summit County (the county on Cuyahoga County’s southern border), so they’re coming.

  


His song was a series of three quick, sharp, loud exclamations followed by a pause, then another group of two or three exclamations.Sometimes he really startled me!

 

Michael loved grape leaves, which I provided for as long as possible. 


I subsequently used an entire leaf of Romaine lettuce in a little vase, which he found to be an  acceptable substitute.

As with all the singers here, Michael had a daily organic grape half and organic apple slice plus Fluker’s cricket hydration cubes for water and dry cricket food. I also mist the mesh lid of each cage nightly, and I’ve seen both Michael and occasionally tree crickets immediately drinking the water drops. 

                       This is a good size for tree crickets. Katydids need something larger
                

                                
                                       Michael Microcentrum with his grape and apple slice.

 

Grape leaves were challenging not only because their season was gradually ending, but also because Nikos really wanted those large leaves. One night when he was being especially obnoxious about trying to seize his leafy prey, I put a large grape leaf on top of his head.

 


 He stopped. The grape leaf seemed to be an immediate calming aid. He sat motionless with the grape leaf on his head for the next half hour.

  


Our two other katydids are gorgeous Black-legged Meadow Katydids (Orchelimum nigripes): one from Geauga County and one from Lake County. Black-legged Meadow Katydids are common along ponds and wetland edges and live quite comfortably in a larger mesh cage with plant cuttings and seed heads from their original locations.

The Lake County Black-legged has a cattail seed head in his cage, as those were abundant in his area. There were no cattails anywhere near the Geauga Black-legged's wetland.  He lived in bulrushes, and that’s exactly what he has now.

You’ll notice in my photos that the Geauga Black-legged’s face is almost white while the Lake County Black-legged’s face is the rusty red of his cattails. Is the color in some way determined by the habitat? I have no idea.

 

                                   Black-legged Meadow Katydid from Geauga County

                                    Black-legged Meadow Katydid from Lake County

You may know the typical song of this species: tic-tic-tic-and then a long whirr.
 

 

                       

                         Nikos watching the Geauga Black-legged Meadow Katydid.

 

Both of these katydids tear into their Romaine lettuce! It’s quite obvious – just look!

 



The Geauga Black-legged generally stays in my studio next to my desk, as he becomes agitated and annoyed by the other Black-legged, who lives in the dining room. That’s fine with me – how nice to have a Black-legged Meadow Katydid singing right next to me while I’m at my desktop computer!   
 
At times, he also sings several erratically-spaced “tics” after his typical tic-tic-tic-whirrr. 
 
Listen: 

                    

All the other residents in our Orthopteran assisted living accommodations are crickets. Always common here are Forbes’s Tree Crickets (Oecanthus forbesi) and the look-alike sound-alike Black-horned Tree Crickets (Oecanthus nigricornis). Black-horneds are more common east of my region and Forbes’s are likely the species that is found west of Cleveland. Because I live in NE Ohio, I’m in the overlap zone of these two species and have been learning to separate them by song and habitat. 

 


 

Black-horned Tree Crickets seem to be more likely to live where there are shrubs and thicker vegetation rather than out in an open, goldenrod-filled meadow. The latter habitat is a prime territory for Forbes’s Tree Crickets.

There’s a difference in the songs that I can hear in the field and also see on a sonogram. (Musicians: it’s the second harmonic.) I can usually hear the difference in the tone quality and subsequently see it on the sonogram. The distinction can be confirmed by the number of wing strokes per second at a given temperature.

I love them all, of course, but I have a bit of a preference for the Black-horned Tree Cricket’s tone quality. Here’s one from Geauga County:

 

Both species are a delight to have at home! They sing consistently and often seem quite confident or even downright bold. When I unzip the mesh lid of their butterfly cages, they may run right up toward my hand to see what I’m doing.


 

As these tree crickets age, their file and scraper song mechanisms can begin to break down. We had a Forbes’s Tree Cricket  - “Squeaky” - who provided an interesting and very obvious example of how this might sound. 

 

My favorite tree crickets are probably the larger, truly gorgeous Broad-winged Tree Crickets (Oecanthus latipennis). They typically live in dense shrubs such as dogwoods, viburnums, and blackberry, so the indoor habitats I create for them always include blackberry cuttings. They often sing from the underside of a leaf and will immediately hide underneath one if startled.

               Broad-winged Tree Cricket on the underside of a leaf, as is often the case
 

The Broad-winged in this photo, however, was quite exposed as he boldly sang near the top of the cage.
 

 
These tree crickets are one of the easier species to identify in the field, as their songs are consistently at a lower pitch than the nearby Black-horned, Forbes’s, or Four-spotted Tree Crickets. 
 
I recorded this example in the house: first, you'll hear Black-horned Tree Cricket. followed by a Broad-winged Tree Cricket. The Broad-winged Tree Cricket's subsequent entrance will be obvious. 
 

 

 For weeks, we had two of our favorite tree crickets upstairs on a bedroom dresser every night: a Snowy Tree Cricket (Oecanthus fultoni) and a Four-spotted Tree Cricket (Oecanthuis quadripunctatus). Yes, I know. We have multiple favorites.

 
We have Snowy Tree Crickets in our neighborhood, including our backyard. Their steady, rhythmic songs are commonly heard along the Lake Erie shore and also in old, inner-ring suburbs like ours.

                                    This is one of our backyard Snowy Tree Crickets
 

One individual moved from the back of the yard to the native honeysuckle trellis against the house as night temperatures got colder, and I subsequently located him and brought him indoors. Next to him on the dresser was the Four-spotted Tree Cricket, who could still sing his steady trill but just had a little trouble getting warmed up at first. 
 
 
                                                    Four-spotted Tree Cricket
 
Here’s a recording from the bedroom in the dark. The Snowy is the first “voice” you’ll hear.
 


Of course, we always have a Handsome Trig or two or three (Phyllopalpus pulchellus). These tiny crickets were never in our neighborhood until about 10 years ago but have now moved north up to the lakeshore from down in Summit County. They eventually found our backyard and are now annual residents. 
 


 

And what about Nikos? When I needed to provide blackberry cuttings for those crickets that required them, Nikos once again launched an attack on the vegetation (but not the crickets). If a grape leaf could calm him down, could a large blackberry leaf accomplish the same outcome?

 


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          You can read more about these crickets and katydids in my online field guide, 
          Listening to Insects at Listeningtoinsects.com



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