Acheta domesticus (Linnaeus)

Weissman, David B. & Gray, David A., 2019, Crickets of the genus Gryllus in the United States (Orthoptera: Gryllidae: Gryllinae), Zootaxa 4705 (1), pp. 1-277 : 29-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4705.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F534C43A-AB09-4CB3-9B08-FD5BDFD90298

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/182387A8-097D-FF8D-51F6-FD9B037FFED9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Acheta domesticus (Linnaeus)
status

 

Acheta domesticus (Linnaeus)

(European) House Cricket

Figs 7–10 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8 View FIGURE 9 View FIGURE 10

Although not a Gryllus and not native to the US, Acheta domesticus is widespread in the western US and seems to be expanding its range (Weissman et al. 1980, 2012). Additionally, calling songs of feral males, anecdotally, appear to be getting louder (even as we grow older and our hearing gets worse) and the chirps seemingly more regular, thus sounding more like a native Gryllus species ( Weissman et al. 2012). Because we have been spending more time locating these feral males, for identification purposes and to confirm that they are not a Gryllus , we include our collection data here (see Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). Many more eastern US collection sites are given in Walker (2019). Interestingly, this species appears not to have established permanent colonies in Australia, despite being introduced ( Rentz & Weissman 2017).

Distribution. Worldwide cosmopolitan cricket.

Recognition characters and song. Usually straw colored (but some individuals dark—see Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ), always with long hind wings, unless apterous ( Weissman & Rentz 1977b, Walker 1977), and a distinctive, irregular, dark transverse bar extending between the eyes. A similar bar is seen in introduced Gryllodes sigillatus but this other cricket always has short hind wings, longer cerci, more flattened appearance, and quicker evasive movements. Song ( Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 , 9 View FIGURE 9 ; R 11–133 View FIGURE 11 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 View FIGURE 22 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 View FIGURE 26 View FIGURE 27 View FIGURE 28 View FIGURE 29 View FIGURE 30 View FIGURE 31 View FIGURE 32 View FIGURE 33 View FIGURE 34 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 View FIGURE 39 View FIGURE 40 View FIGURE 41 View FIGURE 42 View FIGURE 43 View FIGURE 44 View FIGURE 45 View FIGURE 46 View FIGURE 47 View FIGURE 48 View FIGURE 49 View FIGURE 50 View FIGURE 51 View FIGURE View FIGURE 53 View FIGURE 54 View FIGURE 55 View FIGURE 56 View FIGURE 57 View FIGURE 58 View FIGURE 59 View FIGURE 60 View FIGURE 61 View FIGURE 62 View FIGURE 63 View FIGURE 64 View FIGURE 65 View FIGURE 66 View FIGURE 67 View FIGURE 68 View FIGURE 69 View FIGURE 70 View FIGURE 71 View FIGURE 72 View FIGURE 73 View FIGURE 74 View FIGURE 75 View FIGURE 76 View FIGURE 77 View FIGURE 78 View FIGURE 79 View FIGURE 80 View FIGURE 81 View FIGURE 82 View FIGURE 83 View FIGURE 84 View FIGURE 85 View FIGURE 86 View FIGURE 87 View FIGURE 88 View FIGURE 89 View FIGURE 90 View FIGURE 91 View FIGURE 92 View FIGURE 93 View FIGURE 94 View FIGURE 95 View FIGURE 96 View FIGURE 97 View FIGURE 98 View FIGURE 99 View FIGURE 100 View FIGURE 101 View FIGURE 102 View FIGURE 103 View FIGURE 104 View FIGURE 105 View FIGURE 106 View FIGURE 107 View FIGURE 108 View FIGURE 109 View FIGURE 110 View FIGURE 111 View FIGURE 112 View FIGURE 113 View FIGURE 114 View FIGURE 115 View FIGURE 116 View FIGURE 117 View FIGURE 118 View FIGURE 119 View FIGURE 120 View FIGURE 121 View FIGURE 122 View FIGURE 123 View FIGURE 124 View FIGURE 125 View FIGURE 126 View FIGURE 127 View FIGURE 128 View FIGURE 129 View FIGURE 130 View FIGURE 131 View FIGURE 132 View FIGURE 133 ), in A. domesticus , 2–4 (usually 2–3) pulses/chirp delivered at 40–200/minute, dominant frequency 4500–5000 Hz. Compare with the more rapid chirp rate of G. sigillatus on SINA ( Walker 2019).

Geographic range. Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 .

Specimens examined. Arizona. La Paz Co., Quartzite , 26-vi-1980 (S80-46) ; 27-vii-1981 (S81-33) ; 14-ix-2011 (S11-89). Maricopa Co., Buckeye , gas station, 840’, 18-ix-2011 (S11-102). Gila Bend , 712’, 1-viii-2009 (S09-103); 30-vii-2015 (S15-111) . Goodyear , 31-vii-1981 (S81-46) . Scottsdale , 22-iv-1985 (S85-41) . Hwy 85 10.5 m N Ajo , 1240’, 20-viii-1998 (S98-73) . Pima Co., Ajo, 1720 ’, 20-viii-1998 (S98-72, 98-74). Catalina , 2940’, 18-viii-1998 (S98-65) . Organ Pipe National Monument , 1-ix-1961 , D.C. Rentz. Outskirts Tucson on Saguaro Rd. , 31-vii-1981 (S81-35) . Yuma Co., Telegraph Pass , 676’, 15-ix-2011 (S11-92, S11-94). California. Imperial Co., Algodones Dunes 2.6 m NW Glamis off Ted Kipf Road , 240’, 15-ix-2011 (S11-91) . El Centro , 27 & 28-i-1959 , Kirschbaum, D.C. Rentz. Inyo Co., Death Valley National Park, Furnace Creek , 5-vi-1983 (S83-60) ; 5-v-2003 (S03-36) . Kern Co. Bakersfield near Cal State Bakersfield , 5-viii-1980 (S80-70) . Los Angeles Co., CSU Northridge campus, 8-v-2003 (S03-47) . Westlake Village , 22-v-1982 . Orange Co., Crystal Cove , 7-vii-1976 . Tustin , 20-vii-1975 ; 12-vi-1976 . Riverside Co., Blythe , 26-vi-1980 (S80-47) . Corn Springs , 1-ix-2001 ; 18-iv-2010, 3-ix-2012 ; 10-iv-2015. Joshua Tree National Monument, Cottonwood Springs , 3000’, 7-viii-1988 (S88-78) . Palm Springs , 2-iv-1989 (S89-8) . UC Riverside campus, 15-vii-2001 (S01-96) . Box Canyon Rd 10.9 m E Mecca , 800’, 7-viii-1988 (S88-76) . San Bernardino Co., Baker , 1000’, 4-viii-1991 (S91-72) . Barstow , 2300’, 22-vii-2016 (S16-28) . Havasu Lake , 460’, 13- ix-2011 (S11-84) . Newberry Springs , 2160’, 16-viii-1998 (S98-59) . Route 66 at intersection I40 , truck stop. 2103’ 23-vii-2016 (S16-32). Ludlow exit off I40 , 2060’, 16-viii-1998 (S98-60). San Bernardino Mts., Mill Creek Ranger Station , 2800’, 25-vii-1981 (S81-27) . San Diego Co., Borrego Springs , 8-viii-1988 (S88-83) . Santa Clara Co., Los Gatos , 10-ix-1990 . Stanford University, Lake Lagunita , 26-viii-1983 (S83-113) . Shasta Co., Shasta Lake, Bridge Bay Road yacht area, 4-viii-1980 (S80-67) . Kansas. Sedgewick Co., Wichita , 9-viii-1980 . Nebraska. Red Willow Co., McCook , 28-viii-1989 (S89-74) . Nevada. Clark Co., Cottonwood Cove , 750’, 24-vi-1980 (S80-36) ; 26-vii- 1981 (S81-31) . Oregon. Benton Co., Corvallis , 18-i-1969 , Tao. Utah. Utah Co., Provo , 1-ii-1965 , A.T. Whitehead. Texas. Brewster Co., Big Bend National Park, Rio Grande Village , 1860’, 28-v-2016 (S16-12) . Tarrant Co., Grapevine Lake Dam , 23-v-2001 (S01-48) . Tom Green Co., San Angelo , 11-vi-1988 (S88-30) . Val Verde Co., Del Rio , 1000’, 27-vi-1986 (S86-48).

DNA. Multilocus 2017-045 (Gray et al. 2019) shows that A. domesticus is more closely related to Nigrogryllus than to Teleogryllus .

Discussion. Several of the above localities are natural habitats away from human disturbance—e.g. Algodones Dunes (S11-91), Telegraph Pass (S11-92), Box Canyon Road (S88-76), 10.5 m N Ajo (S98-73), which is why we recommended ( Weissman et al. 2012) a switch to Gryllodes sigillatus by the pet-feeder industry, because the latter does not appear to readily exist away from human disturbance. Olzer et al. (2019) compared behavior of feral and commercially reared A. domesticus .

CSU

Colorado State University

UC

Upjohn Culture Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Orthoptera

Family

Haglotettigoniidae

Genus

Acheta

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF