Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cricket_(insect)> ?p ?o }
- Cricket_(insect) abstract "Crickets (also known as \"true crickets\"), of the family Gryllidae, are insects related to bush crickets, and, more distantly, to grasshoppers. The Gryllidae have mainly cylindrical bodies, round heads, and long antennae. Behind the head is a smooth, robust pronotum. The abdomen ends in a pair of long cerci (spikes); females have a long, cylindrical ovipositor. The hind legs have enlarged femora (thighs), providing power for jumping. The front wings are adapted as tough, leathery elytra (wing covers), and some crickets chirp by rubbing parts of these together. The hind wings are membranous and folded when not in use for flight; many species, however, are flightless. The largest members of the family are the bull crickets, Brachytrupes, which are up to 5 cm (2 in) long.More than 900 species of crickets are described; the Gryllidae are distributed all around the world except at latitudes 55° or higher, with the greatest diversity being in the tropics. They occur in varied habitats from grassland, bushes, and forests to marshes, beaches, and caves. Crickets are mainly nocturnal, and are best known for the loud, persistent, chirping song of males trying to attract females, although some species are mute. The singing species have good hearing, via the tympani (eardrums) on the tibiae of the front legs.Crickets appear as characters in literature. The Talking Cricket features in Carlo Collodi's 1883 children's book, The Adventures of Pinocchio, and in films based on the book. The eponymous insect is central to Charles Dickens's 1845 The Cricket on the Hearth, as is the chirping insect in George Selden's 1960 The Cricket in Times Square. Crickets are celebrated in poems by William Wordsworth, John Keats, and Du Fu. They are kept as pets in countries from China to Europe, sometimes for cricket fighting. Crickets are efficient at converting their food into body mass, making them a candidate for food production. They are used as food in Southeast Asia, where they are sold deep-fried in markets as snacks. They are also used to feed carnivorous pets and zoo animals. In Brazilian folklore, crickets feature as omens of various events.".
- Cricket_(insect) thumbnail Gryllus_campestris_MHNT.jpg?width=300.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink books?id=25M5mMH4qfQC.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink books?id=nAP2LkQV0X0C.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink Adomest.html.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink Gryllus.html.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink Gsigilla.html.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageExternalLink GorochovMostovski_49_1_2008_188.aspx.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageID "21481963".
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageLength "45716".
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageOutDegree "227".
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageRevisionID "704590747".
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink African_Invertebrates.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Aggression.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Alagoas.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Ant_cricket.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Antenna_(biology).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Anti-predator_adaptation.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Anurogryllus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Aphid.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Barbados.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Beef_cattle.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Biodiversity.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Brachytrupes.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Buddy_Holly.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cachoplistinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Camouflage.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cannibalism.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Canopy_(biology).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Caraguatatuba.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Carboniferous.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Carlo_Collodi.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Crickets.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ensifera.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Extant_Triassic_first_appearances.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Insect_rearing.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cercus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Dickens.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Chemoreceptor.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Chitin.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cladogram.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Connecticut.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Conscience.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Copholandrevus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cricket_(magazine).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cricket_fighting.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Cricket_paralysis_virus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Crickets_as_pets.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Dog_food.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Dolbears_law.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Dominance_(genetics).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Dominance_hierarchy.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Drosophila.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Du_Fu.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Elytron.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Eneopterinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Ensifera.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Entomopathogenic_fungus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Entomophagy.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Environment_(biophysical).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Euscyrtinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Fecundity.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Feed_conversion_ratio.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Fertilisation.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Field_cricket.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink File:Chingrit_thot.jpg.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink File:Field_cricket_Gryllus_pennsylvanicus.ogg.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Flesh_fly.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Fly.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink George_Selden_(author).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gourd.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Grasshopper.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllidium.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllodes_supplicans.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Grylloidea.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllomiminae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllomorphinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllospeculinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllus_assimilis.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllus_bimaculatus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllus_campestris.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Gryllus_firmus.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Guardian_angel.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Hapithinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Hawaii.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Hemimetabolism.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Herbivore.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Hope.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Host_(biology).
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink House_cricket.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Hylidae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Iberian_Peninsula.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Inbreeding_depression.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Insect.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Itarinae.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Henri_Fabre.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Jiminy_Cricket.
- Cricket_(insect) wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Nepomuk_von_Laicharting.