No, Crickets can breed anywhere outside.
breed
yes, brown crickets can and will breed if they are in the right conditions.
A cricket habitat is a living environment for crickets to thrive and/or breed. This sort of habitat is useful for pet owners who prefer to keep large quantities of crickets on hand for feeding to reptiles or similar insect-eating animals. A habitat will alow the pet owner to purchase crickets in bulk at a greatly discounted price (sometimes 10% of average retail), and/or allow them to breed their own crickets and eliminate the need for purchasing crickets altogether.
about a month if they have a nice size container and plenty of water
Breed crickets in their own container as they may kill your gecko if they are left with it. Personally, i think crickets are the most annoying feeder to breed. Blaptica Dubia roaches are actually much cleaner, give live birth (no eggs to deal with), can't climb, jump, or fly, and you don't have to clean up after them very often because the baby roaches eat leftover feces. Plus they don't bite (which crickets do to smaller animals than us). Aaron Pauling sells them on his website.
Crickets live for 2-8 months with correct heating requirements and space to breed and live...
crickets have crickets and katydids have katydids
These geckos are insectivores, relying on a variety of live feeders such as insects, mealworms and superworms.
It depends on the type of cricket. Camel crickets do not like light but house crickets and field crickets do.
There are over 900 species of crickets. You will find House, Cave or Camel crickets and Field crickets in Illinois
They are baby crickets and You usually her them in live crickets