Yes, crickets can lay eggs in houses. To prevent them from doing so, you can seal any cracks or openings in your home, keep your house clean and free of food crumbs, and use insecticides or traps specifically designed to target crickets.
Yes, crickets do lay eggs. Female crickets typically lay between 150 to 400 eggs at a time.
Crickets lay eggs, but if they are left too long they can sometimes be eaten.
Crickets typically lay their eggs in moist soil or underground in burrows.
they have eggs
They lay eggs.
Yes, they can lay eggs.
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).
!. Crickets need warmth 2. Crickets need food 3. Crickets need water 4. Crickets need a good place to lay eggs
Camel crickets do go away during the winter. The adult crickets die in the winter after laying eggs in the ground which will hatch in the spring.
Crickets reproduce sexually. The male cricket produces a sperm packet called a spermatophore, which is transferred to the female during mating. The female then lays eggs, which hatch into immature crickets called nymphs.
Crickets need a substrate to lay their eggs in. They probably don't like what you have provided for them. I suggest a glass vial of water with moist cotton sealing the water in. Be careful to watch the vial as it may mold and can be harmful to the crickets.
Female crickets lay eggs by using their ovipositor to deposit them into the ground. The process involves finding a suitable location, digging a hole, laying the eggs, and covering them with soil to protect them. The eggs hatch into nymphs, which grow and develop into adult crickets.