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common name: tropical house cricket
scientific name: Gryllodes sigillatus (F. Walker) (Insecta: Orthoptera: Gryllidae)

Introduction - Distribution - Life Cycle - Identification - Habitat - Song and Mating - Management - Selected References

Introduction (Back to Top)

The tropical house cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus, (also known as the "decorated cricket"), is common in urban areas and sometimes occur indoors. It is easily reared but, unlike its temperate counterpart (the house cricket), it is seldom exploited for pet food or fish bait.

Other Florida field and house crickets

Distribution (Back to Top)

The tropical house cricket is probably native to southwestern Asia but has been spread by commerce to tropical regions throughout the world.

Distribution of the tropical house cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus (F. Walker).

Figure 1. Distribution of the tropical house cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus (F. Walker).

Life Cycle (Back to Top)

Like house crickets, there is no special overwintering stage and generations are continuous. Depending on the temperature, development from egg to adult takes two to three months.

Identification (Back to Top)

The tropical house cricket is a 13 to 18 mm long, light yellowish-brown, somewhat flattened cricket. Males have wings that only half cover the abdomen and females are practically wingless. Very rarely, a male or female has long wings that make them look like house crickets. However, in the tropical house cricket the space between the antennae is narrow (about the width of the basal segment of either antenna), and there is a single dark transverse band between the eyes.

Tropical house cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus (F. Walker), male (left) and female (right).

Figure 2. Tropical house cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus (F. Walker), male (left) and female (right). Photograph by Paul M. Choate, University of Florida.

Habitat (Back to Top)

In Florida, tropical house crickets are most frequently found outdoors in or near paved areas. At night they issue from hiding places, such as crevices between pavement blocks, to forage (like roaches) and sing (like crickets). When they move into buildings, as they occasionally do, their songs reveal their presence.

Song and Mating (Back to Top)

The calling song (690 Kb wav file) consists of a sequence of brief chirps, each with three principal pulses. Within a chirp, each pulse represents a closure of the wings while a scraper on one wing engages a toothed file on the other. The pulses of a chirp grow successively longer as 1/2, 3/4 and the entire file is used (graphs). Only males call. When a female is attracted to the song, courtship ensues, and the male attaches a bag of sperm (spermatophore) to the female. The male surrounds the spermatophore with a proteinaceous mass on which the female feeds while the sperm pass into her internal sperm receptacle. The bigger the mass, the longer the sperm may have to enter, because the female usually eats all or part of the covering prior to removing the spermatophore proper.

Management (Back to Top)

Generally tropical house crickets do no harm. Should they cause problems by their presence or calling in a structure, they can be eliminated by setting out baits sold for cockroach or earwig control.

Selected References (Back to Top)