Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
A recording of the spring field cricket's song can be heard here.
I think the field cricket would taste excellent if you were starving.
This is played on front field cricket pitch, with Founders as the backdrop.
G. bryanti is among the larger species of field crickets.
It has also made it possible for the competitors to field cricket teams and play each other.
Field crickets prefer to live outdoors, but will move inside when environmental conditions become unfavorable.
The field cricket does not consume these materials, but "cuts out" a path through which it may pass.
Spring field crickets are sexually mature from late May to early August.
In many cases, though, the Dolbear's formula is a close enough approximation for field crickets, too.
This formula is accurate to within a degree or so when applied to the chirping of the field cricket.
Gryllus campestris is one of many crickets known as the Field cricket.
Within its range this field cricket will burrow into soil in fields and forest edges.
Green grasshoppers and black field crickets leaped for their lives under the grinding wheels.
The village has several sports opportunities, with locals fielding cricket and football teams.
He researches the role of acoustic signals in field cricket mating behaviour.
Unlike House crickets, which can adapt themselves to indoor conditions, the field cricket will die by early winter.
The human inhabitant may be aggravated by the field cricket's nocturnal chirping.
Acheta is a genus of field crickets.
Field crickets are insects of order Orthoptera.
Field crickets are the familiar inch-long, dark brown ones often heard chirping in pastures or lawns.
It may also be referred to as the black field cricket, a common name it shares with Teleogryllus commodus.
In 1977 he returned to Flowery Field Cricket Club as a professional.
Field crickets also eat grass.
Consequently, field crickets in temperate regions exhibit diapause.
G. veletis is a solitary, aggressive, omnivorous, burrow-inhabiting species of field cricket.
Gryllus campestris is one of many crickets known as the Field cricket.
In the late 1980s the British population of Gryllus campestris shrunk to a single colony of around 100 individual insects.
Gryllus campestris
The Field Cricket Gryllus campestris is the most endangered cricket species in Britain.
C. Venne, F. Ahnfeldt (2003) Neuansiedlung der Feldgrille (Gryllus campestris) in Bielefeld?
Coates Castle is a Site of Special Scientific Interest within the parish which at one time contained the entire known remaining British population of the field cricket Gryllus campestris.
The Field cricket Gryllus campestris prefers dry, sunny locations with short vegetation, like dry grasslands and is restricted to heathlands and oligotrophic grasslands at the northern edge of its range.
A. Hochkirch, K. Witzenberger, A. Teerling, F. Niemeyer (2007) Translocation of an endangered insect species, the field cricket (Gryllus campestris Linnaeus, 1758) in northern Germany.
An area around Coates Castle has been designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest which contains the entire known remaining British population of the Field Cricket Gryllus campestris.
This consists of three blocks of land all within a one kilometre radius of Coates Castle and which contains an important British population of the Field Cricket Gryllus campestris, an insect protected under Schedule 5 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.
By ablation experiments and the local electrical stimulation of parts of the brain of Gryllus campestris it has been shown that sites near the mushroom bodies control the production of normal song-rhythms, while stimulation of the central body leads to abnormal songs through the changed temporal pattern of sound-pulses.