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southern mole cricket

Neoscapteriscus borellii Giglio-Tos 1894

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map map of spread pronotal patterns male
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female head & front legs left foreleg left foreleg
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eggs foretibia trochantal blade burrow
Alien origin and spread of this SINA species.
20 s of calling song; male from Broward County, FL; 24.2°C. Dominant frequency 2.7 kHz. (WTL341-14)
This spectrogram is a 2 s excerpt of the 20 s audio file accessible above.
spectrogram
Song at 25°C: A low-pitched, ringing trill at 54 p/s that issues from a horn-shaped opening in the ground during the first 2 hours after sunset or, after heavy rains, later. The male's courtship song, sometimes produced for minutes from a closed burrow, resembles the calling song of the northern mole cricket but is higher pitched and has a slightly faster chirp rate.
Identification: Tibial dactyls separated at base by space equal to at least half of basal width of a dactyl. Viewed from rear, sharp lower edge of trochantal blade extending one-half to two-thirds distance from trochantal tip to junction with femur. Forewings longer than pronotum; hindwings longer than abdomen. Length 25-32 mm.
Similar species: N. vicinus has the tibial dactyls nearly touching at base. N. abbreviatus has the forewings shorter than pronotum and the hindwings concealed by the fore wings.
Habitat: Wet or moist, sandy or mucky, open areas—including fields, lawns, and the margins of ponds and streams.
Season: One generation per year except in south Florida, where there are two. Some individuals overwinter as adults, but most do so as large nymphs. Eggs are laid in spring. Most calling is Feb.-July, but because adults are long-lived, some calling occurs year-round. Flights are heaviest in April, May, and June except in south Florida, where a second generation sometimes produces a flight peak in July or August; n. Fla. data.
Remarks: This species was long thought to be native to southeastern United States. However, analysis of early records revealed that it first appeared in the United States in l904, near the port of Brunswick, Georgia. Subsequently it became established at other ports—Charleston, South Carolina, l9l5; Mobile, Alabama, l9l9; Port Arthur, Texas, l925—and spread from these sites to occupy most of the southeastern states (Walker & Nickle 1981).

The N. borellii introduced at Brunswick and Mobile had a mottled pronotal pattern, whereas those at Charleston and Port Arthur had four light dots arranged in a trapezoid on the dark pronotal disk (see image 3 above). The two patterns initially spread from the separate sites of introduction, but in 1931 the mottled pattern occurred only in the vicinity of Mobile. The recent establishment of N. borellii along the Colorado River and in turf near Yuma, Arizona, raises the possibility that it will spread to other sandy well-watered areas throughout the Southwest.

The southern mole cricket is largely carnivorous and apparently does less damage to established grass than the tawny and short-winged mole-crickets, which are mostly herbivorous.
More information:
Family Gryllotalpidae, genus Neoscapteriscus.
References: Hayslip 1943, see additional references on genus page.
Nomenclature: OSF (Orthoptera Species File Online).
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