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  1. Jerusalem crickets (or potato bugs) are a group of large, flightless insects in the genera Ammopelmatus and Stenopelmatus, together comprising the tribe Stenopelmatini. The former genus is native to the western United States and parts of Mexico, while the latter genus is from Central America.

  2. Oct 18, 2022 · What is Jerusalem Cricket (Potato Bug)? Jerusalem crickets (Stenopelmatus fuscus) are large insects that look like a cross between a large ant and a fat wasp. Their ant-like appearance can look frightening to many people due to their large bulging head, small eyes, and long antennas.

  3. Jerusalem crickets are also known as ‘potato bugs’, and are a group of large, flightless insects native to the USA and Mexico. Jerusalem Cricket Facts Overview. Jerusalem crickets are great big fibbers of the Orthopteran order, or at least those who named them are.

  4. Luckily, a Jerusalem cricket bite isn't dangerous; it's just painful. They don't sting and they don't have venom. Jerusalem crickets do not have wings and can not fly.

  5. Jerusalem cricket, (subfamily Stenopelmatinae), any of about 50 species of insects in the family Stenopelmatidae (order Orthoptera) that are related to grasshoppers and crickets. Jerusalem crickets are large, brownish, awkward insects that are found in Asia, South Africa, and both North and Central.

  6. Nov 11, 2022 · Jerusalem Crickets are found under rocks or often walking along gravel in valleys, sandy banks, or on hillsides. This species prefers drier climes and loose, dusty soil. The tracks they leave behind are unique, created by dragging their large abdomens across the fine particles of soil.

  7. May 1, 2019 · Jerusalem crickets range in length from a respectable 2 cm to an impressive 7.5 cm (about 3 inches) and can weigh as much as 13 g. Most of these flightless crickets are brown or tan in color but have a striped abdomen with alternating bands of black and light brown.

  8. Jerusalem crickets are well adapted for their semi-subterranean lifestyle, digging with powerful, armored front legs, and even using their large jaws (mandibles) and big head to aid in the excavation. And what’s up with that strange head?

  9. Nov 10, 2021 · Family Stenopelmatidae (Jerusalem Crickets) Other Common Names Sand Crickets, Wetas, Potato Bugs, Children of the Earth (Nina de la tierra)(Mexico), Stone Crickets, Chaco

  10. Feb 17, 2022 · Genus Ammopelmatus (Jerusalem Cricket) Other Common Names. Woh-tzi-Neh (Navajo, variously translated as "old bald-headed man", "skull insect", or "bone-neck beetle"), Nina de la Tierra (Spanish, "child of the earth"), Potato Bug, Devil's Baby. Synonyms and other taxonomic changes.

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