Crickets live in warm damp places. They are omnivores and will eat almost anything (including each other). They can't live in dry areas: they will dehydrate, dry out, and die.
Crickets can be found in almost every damp tropical and subtropical system around the world, and up into wet subpolar (taiga) climates: their eggs are hardy, and will survive the winter if left buried and undisturbed.
They are harmless to humans, though they occasionally try to bite if cornered or handled. Some societies keep them as pets; others use them as a food source for pets further up the food chain.
The cricket's ears are located on the front legs.
on there legs
There are no insects with eyes on their knees. However, there are many kinds of insects with ears on their knees. Some examples include crickets and grasshoppers.
The gene for free ears is located on chromosome 22. If the ears are attached, this is due to gene "Z".
The external parts of the ear are located in the temporal region of the head.
in your ears. and the smallest bone in your body is called the stirrup which is located in the ear.
Auditory receptors are located in internal ears. The vestibulocochlear nerve carries the signal from internal ear to brain.
Yes
their legs
The chirp is made by rubbing their left forewing against their right forewing.
so that they can hear the predetors
Because they can. Why does it matter to you?(:
They have ears on their "knees" or where they bend their hind legs.
A crickets ears are two small white dots found one on each leg near the bend of the knee.
Short horned grasshoppers have ears in the sides of the abdomen. Long-horned grasshoppers & crickets have ears in the knee-joints of their front legs.
"Crickets have tympanic membranes located just below the middle joint of each front leg (or knee). This enables them to hear another cricket's song." ~ Excerpted from the article at Wikipedia , see related link below .
The insect that has ears on its front legs are crickets.
A cricket's ears are on its front legs, just below the knees and they have four acoustic inputs.
Crickets (and other insects) do not have ears. They have a membrane on the exoskeleton on each side of the head equivalent to an eardrum.