Wart-biter cricket (Decticus verrucivorus)

Wart-biter cricket
Wart-biter cricket

Wart-biter cricket fact file

Wart-biter cricket description

KingdomAnimalia
PhylumArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderOrthoptera
FamilyTettigoniidae
GenusDecticus

The wart-biter cricket is a large, dark green bush-cricket, often with dark brown blotches on the pronotum and wings. A keel is present on the pronotum of both sexes and the wings are a little longer than the body. The female ovipositor is long and slightly upcurved. The English name of this species refers to the old Swedish practice of allowing the cricket to bite warts from the skin. The scientific name verrucivorus derives from the Latin, 'verruca' meaning 'wart' and 'vorous' 'to devour'. The distinctive song is only heard in hot sunny weather and consists of a series of rapidly repeated clicks in short bursts, which may last for several minutes.

Size
Body length (females): 31-37 mm
Body length (males): 32-37 mm
Female ovipositor length: 19-21 mm
Top

Wart-biter cricket biology

The elusive adults are mainly active during the day, males sing only in hot, sunny and still conditions. The species is omnivorous, eating a range of herbs and insects, including even adult grasshoppers. Eggs are laid singly in the ground from early August, hatching two or more years later during May. Six or seven nymphal stages are passed before the adult stage is reached in July. Adults rarely survive later than September.

Top

Wart-biter cricket range

This species occurs throughout Europe (except the extreme south) and in temperate Asia. In Great Britain it is extremely localised and restricted to southern England where just five populations are now known, one of these, in Kent, has resulted from a reintroduction. Natural populations only occur in East Sussex, Dorset and Wiltshire.

You can view distribution information for this species at the National Biodiversity Network Gateway.

Top

Wart-biter cricket habitat

The wart-biter typically inhabits sunny, well-sheltered calcareous grassland, however, one British population is known from rough heathland adjacent to improved grassland. The species requires a mosaic of bare ground and short turf for egg-laying and early nymphal stages, and taller tussocks of vegetation for the larger nymphs and adult stages.

Top

Wart-biter cricket status

Listed as Vulnerable in Great Britain, and protected under Schedule 5 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

Top

Wart-biter cricket threats

Threats to this species include unsuitable management of grasslands through reduced grazing leading to scrub invasion, or excessive grazing resulting in a loss of vegetation structure. At some sites with low population densities, predation by birds may be an important factor. In 1999 an illegal concert at a National Nature Reserve (NNR) in East Sussex resulted in the trampling of young wart-biter crickets.

Top

Wart-biter cricket conservation

The UK Biodiversity Action Plan (BAP) for the wart-biter cricket outlines the long-term aim of restoring the species to former sites and securing its future with 10 self-sustaining populations by 2010. The wart-biter cricket was one of the first species to be targeted by English Nature's Species Recovery Programme. Research into the habitat needs and ecology of the wart-biter cricket began in 1987, and the species has been bred in captivity at London Zoo; some of this stock has been successfully reintroduced into suitably restored habitat at former wart-biter sites. Research has thrown light on the habitat needs of this species, this has allowed appropriate habitat management techniques to be devised and encouraged at all occupied and proposed future sites. Further reintroductions are currently being planned.

The UK Biodiversity Action Plan for this species is available at UK BAP.

There may be further information about this species available via the National Biodiversity Network Gateway.

View information on this species at the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre.

Top

Authentication

Information supplied and authenticated by Bryan Pinchen (independent ecologist).

Top

Glossary

Calcareous
Containing free calcium carbonate, chalky.
Nymphal
Stage of insect development, similar in appearance to the adult but sexually immature.
Omnivorous
An organism that feeds on both plants and animals.
Ovipositor
Egg-laying organ in female insects consisting of outgrowths of the abdomen (the hind region of the body in insects). The stinging organ and poison sac of worker bees and non-reproductive female wasps is a modified ovipositor.
Pronotum
In insects, the hardened cuticle on the upper surface of the first thoracic segment (the part of the body nearest the head).
Top

References

More »Related species

Throscodectes (Throscodectes xiphos)Baetica (Baetica ustulata)Isophya (Isophya harzi)Peacock katydid (Pterochroza ocellata)Throscodectes (Throscodectes xederoides)Predatory bush cricket (Saga pedo)Windbalea (Windbalea viride)Metrioptera (Metrioptera domogledi)

Please donate to ARKive today

Help us share the wonders of the natural world. Donate today!

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the latest wild news direct to your inbox.

Get involved

ARKive relies on its media donors to donate photos and videos. Can you help? There are plenty of other ways you can get involved too!

X
Close

Image credit

Wart-biter cricket  
Wart-biter cricket

© Roger Key

Dr Roger Key
Tel: +44 (0) 1845 567 292
key_r_s@yahoo.co.uk

X
Close

Link to this photo

ARKive species - Wart-biter cricket (Decticus verrucivorus) Embed this ARKive thumbnail link by copying and pasting the code below.

Terms of Use - The displayed thumbnail may be used as a link from your website to ARKive's online content for private, scientific, conservation or educational purposes only. It may NOT be used within Apps.

Read more about

X
Close

MyARKive

MyARKive offers the scrapbook feature to signed-up members, allowing you to organize your favourite ARKive images and videos and share them with friends.

X
Close

Terms and Conditions of Use of Materials

Copyright in this website and materials contained on this website (Material) belongs to Wildscreen or its licensors.

Visitors to this website (End Users) are entitled to:

  • view the contents of, and Material on, the website;
  • download and retain copies of the Material on their personal systems in digital form in low resolution for their own personal use;
  • teachers, lecturers and students may incorporate the Material in their educational material (including, but not limited to, their lesson plans, presentations, worksheets and projects) in hard copy and digital format for use within a registered educational establishment, provided that the integrity of the Material is maintained and that copyright ownership and authorship is appropriately acknowledged by the End User.

End Users shall not copy or otherwise extract, alter or manipulate Material other than as permitted in these Terms and Conditions of Use of Materials.

Additional use of flagged material

Green flagged material 

Certain Material on this website (Licence 4 Material) displays a green flag next to the Material and is available for not-for-profit conservation or educational use. This material may be used by End Users, who are individuals or organisations that are in our opinion not-for-profit, for their not-for-profit conservation or not-for-profit educational purposes. Low resolution, watermarked images may be copied from this website by such End Users for such purposes. If you require high resolution or non-watermarked versions of the Material, please contact Wildscreen with details of your proposed use.

Creative commons material

Certain Material on this website has been licensed to Wildscreen under a Creative Commons Licence. These images are clearly marked with the Creative Commons buttons and may be used by End Users only in the way allowed by the specific Creative Commons Licence under which they have been submitted. Please see http://creativecommons.org for details.

Any other use

Please contact the copyright owners directly (copyright and contact details are shown for each media item) to negotiate terms and conditions for any use of Material other than those expressly permitted above. Please note that many of the contributors to ARKive are commercial operators and may request a fee for such use.

Save as permitted above, no person or organisation is permitted to incorporate any copyright material from this website into any other work or publication in any format (this includes but is not limited to: websites, Apps, CDs, DVDs, intranets, extranets, signage, digital communications or on printed materials for external or other distribution). Use of the Material for promotional, administrative or for-profit purposes is not permitted.