Emma Field Cricket - World Forestry Day - Animal India
The Emma field cricket (Teleogryllus emma) is a field cricket insect distributed in East Asia. In Korea, it follows a univoltine life cycle, where overwintered eggs hatch in early summer, nymphs develop until September, and adults reproduce and lay eggs in September and October. Species that inhabit the same areas tend to have different types of calling songs. Male crickets produce calling songs to attract females. The egg overwintering strategy has evolved several times independently. Male Emma field crickets exhibit a strong positive behavioral syndrome between activity and aggression. Male field crickets require an energy-rich diet for calling, while female Emma field crickets need a diet with a higher protein content for egg production. The Emma field cricket is edible and consumed globally. An Emma field cricket was observed sitting on dry leaves in a forest, camouflaged during World Forestry Day at Tehatta, West Bengal, India, on 21/03/2024. The United Nations General Assembly established World Forestry
- Product Code
- ILEA002480836
- Registered date
- 2024/3/21 00:00:00
- Credit
- NurPhoto / Kyodo News Images
- Media source
- Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto
- Media size
- 6048 × 4024 pixel
- Deployment size
- 10.87(MB)*
*File size when opened in Photoshop, etc.