A camel-backed cave cricket is classified as a troglophile. Troglophiles are organisms that can live both in caves and in surface environments, while troglobites are specialized cave-dwelling creatures that cannot survive outside of caves. Camel-backed cave crickets are adapted to cave life but can also be found in above-ground habitats.
The camel-backed cave cricket is a troglophile. It is sometimes known as a cricket spider, or spider cricket, and is often mistaken for a large spider. It eats mold and fungus. It lives in basements and in crawl spaces and can jump five feet or more. People don't like them because they will jump right in your face -- sometimes in an attempt to jump away from you! It looks nasty, but cannot harm you. It can let off a very bad smell if you kill it. They attract rats and mice (which like to eat them -- yumm), they may move into the house itself, particularly in hot weather, and they will eat fabric, so an infestation should be cleaned out. There are several poisons and traps you can use which will not harm pets or people if used properly.
the lady who backed into you, clearly she wasnt paying attention and backed into your car
sadly it is backed only by promises. It used to be backed by gold but that was taken away and now it is backed by nothing.
Whomever backed into it is at fault.
I backed away from the big dog.
Ladder-backed Woodpecker was created in 1829.
White-backed Swallow was created in 1841.
Plain-backed Snowfinch was created in 1876.
Chestnut-backed Owlet was created in 1846.
Plain-backed Sparrow was created in 1844.
Green-backed Trogon was created in 1766.
Stripe-backed Antbird was created in 1831.