white
Crickets cannot see color. They can see UV rays, but not color.
It depends on the type of cricket. Camel crickets do not like light but house crickets and field crickets do.
There is a wide range in different types of crickets. There are; Cave crickets, Camel crickets, Spider crickets, Mormon crickets, Jerusalem crickets, House crickets, Field crickets, and Sand treaders. Crickets belong to the animal kingdom and classified as insects. Their phylum is arthropods.
most crickets eat grass
yes, brown crickets can and will breed if they are in the right conditions.
It depends how many crickets there is, if there is like 10, they may attack your anole but and if there is like 3 or 4, the crickets cannot harm you anole.
There is a wide range in different types of crickets. There are; Cave crickets, Camel crickets, Spider crickets, Mormon crickets, Jerusalem crickets, House crickets, Field crickets, and Sand treaders. Crickets belong to the animal kingdom and classified as insects. Their phylum is arthropods.
Crickets like both equally
no
Crickets like the night time is why they come out at night. Plus it is safer for them to be out at night than it is during the day.
This is dependent on which viewpoint one looks at this from. From a human viewpoint, crickets are indeed colorblind in that they cannot see certain colors that humans can see. However they can also see violet and ultraviolet wavelengths which humans cannot see. Crickets can see color, but not the color humans can see.