Yes, they can lay eggs.
Crickets lay eggs, but if they are left too long they can sometimes be eaten.
Crickets do not have babies, they lay eggs. A mated female can lay up to 3000 +- 245 eggs during her adult life of about 70 days (not all will survive).
They pick them up on their backs and carry them into through wilderness hoping to keep them safe!!
Baby frogs usually eat small crickets or small ants. Tadpoles eat algae.
For your bearded dragon to be healthiest you should feed him crickets meal worms and Romain lettuce. when he is a baby he probably wont eat the salad, and he will eat a LOT of crickets. when he gets older he will cut back on crickets and go to salad. I would not recommend giving him meal worms until he is full grown they can cause impaction in babies.
crickets have crickets and katydids have katydids
Centipedes belong to a category of arthropoda called myriapods; they prey upon insects.
No, crickets do not eat their babies, but there are certain specifications for breeding them. They are cannibalistic, so if not supplied with proper food, they will eat each other, and small babies would be an easy target.
It depends on the type of cricket. Camel crickets do not like light but house crickets and field crickets do.
They are baby crickets and You usually her them in live crickets
There are over 900 species of crickets. You will find House, Cave or Camel crickets and Field crickets in Illinois