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Thomas J. Walker/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
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Lucinda Treadwell/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
Rio Grande Virtuoso Katydid (Amblycorypha rivograndis), ovipositor of female allotype.
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Thomas J. Walker/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor (malformed) of specimen.
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Rattler Round-winged Katydid (Amblycorypha rotundifolia) ovipositor of specimen.
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Lucinda Treadwell/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
Uhler's Virtuoso Katydid (Amblycorypha uhleri) male specimen (collected 20 Aug 1964, recording WTL 014-3).
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Lucinda Treadwell/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
Uhler's Virtuoso Katydid (Amblycorypha uhleri) male specimen (collected 20 Aug 1964, recording WTL 014-3). Stridulatory area of left tegmen has been removed to allow study of file teeth.
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Anabrus cerciata, dorsal view of male abdomen apex. Fig. 7 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus cerciata, drawing of left oblique dorsal view of right male cercus. Fig. 9 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus longipes, drawing of left oblique dorsal view of right male cercus (representative of specimens from British Columbia and northern Washington). Fig. 20 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus longipes, drawing of left oblique dorsal view of right male cercus (representative of specimens from southern Washington and central Idaho). Fig. 22 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus simplex, drawing of subgenital plate of female, apex uppermost, showing apical hooks (HO). Fig. 18 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus simplex, drawing of dorsal view of apex of male abdomen (t=tergite, c=cercus). Fig. 8 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus simplex, drawing of right male cercus, left oblique dorsal view. Fig. 23 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Anabrus spokan, drawing of left oblique dorsal view of right male cercus. Fig. 21 in Gurney, A.B. 1939. Aids to the identification of the mormon and coulee crickets and their allies (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae; Gryllacrididae). US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Entomol. & Plant Quarantine E-479.19 pp.
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Susan A. Wineriter/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
Common Short-tailed Cricket (Anurogryllus arboreus) male.
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Thomas J. Walker/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
Photograph of staked burrows, Gainesville, FL, by T.J. Walker, University of Florida. Each stake is the home borrow of a male. Males often call first at their home burrows. If a male attracts a female, they mate in his burrow, she takes the burrow, and he leaves. If he attracts no female, he nonetheless abandons his home burrow in a few days and each evening first calls from a perch and then searches for females in their burrows.
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Thomas J. Walker/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images
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Thomas J. Walker/Singing Insects of North America
SINA images