You need to feed them once daily. They eat different brands of cricket food. They can also eat a small pinch of fish food or a slice of fruit. A moist cotton ball is a good water source. Clean cricket's cage weekly.
To effectively take care of crickets, provide a suitable habitat with proper ventilation, temperature, and humidity. Feed them a balanced diet of vegetables, fruits, and commercial cricket food. Keep their enclosure clean and provide hiding spots for them to feel secure. Monitor their health and behavior regularly to ensure they are thriving.
(they actually feed on crickets, beetles and maybe even lizards
Not exactly, because they usually need a heat lamp. Also it is sort of gross feeding them live crickets on a daily basis.
Newborn crickets differ from adult crickets in behavior and development. Newborn crickets are smaller, less mobile, and rely on their parents for care. They go through several molts to grow and develop into adult crickets. Adult crickets are larger, more active, and capable of reproduction. They exhibit mating behaviors and are independent in finding food and shelter.
It needs alot of water. Crickets are the best food for it.
The whole ecosystem would collapse around us slowly and you, my friend, would die along with the planet. Basically, take care of the bugs- they're important for your survival.
crickets have crickets and katydids have katydids
Crickets actually do bite. They have two jaws that can pinch you. There is a wart biter cricket used for this action.
crickets get water from grass , but if you are taking care of one there are water pouches at pet stores
Crickets could eat reeds and algae but, since crickets are not well adapted to aquatic life they typically would not. There are examples of non-aquatic algae (such as lichens) that crickets could eat without getting their feet wet if you care to argue.
1 year, give or take 1 year, give or take
about a month if they have a nice size container and plenty of water