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Environmental
Records Centre
for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly
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Bush-cricket calls
There are only a small number of cricket species in Cornwall,
so it is relatively easy to learn the different sounds made.
Please refer to our Bat Detectors
– A Beginner’s Guide for Orthopterists page
for more information.
| To enable greater accessibility
to our visitors these grasshopper calls are available
in three formats. |
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Windows Media Audio files are compressed
to speed up download. They will take 6-10 seconds
to download before playing automatically within
Internet Explorer on any Microsoft Windows computer.
If you you do not already have Windows Media Player
installed, you can download the free player for
both PCs and MACs from http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/mp10/default.aspx. |
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Motion Picture Expert Group Audio
format files are also compressed files. They will
also take 6-10 seconds to download, before opening
up your default player to hear the sound. |
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Waveform format files are uncompressed,
giving better sound quality but producing much larger
files. It is recommended that you choose
this format only if you are on broadband.
Over a normal 56k dial up connection, each will
take 2-3 minutes to download . A broadband connection
should take 6-10 seconds before you hear the sound
in your default player. |
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Great Green Bush-cricket:
This is our loudest species, so a detector may not
be necessary. However, it will often increase range
for older orthopterists whose high frequency hearing
is naturally diminishing.
The call may be ventriloquial, as on my local cliffs
there were occasions at night when the stridulation
was audible, but the detector registered nothing when
pointed in the direction of the calling. This may need
further investigation.
The stridulation heard on the detector can be likened
to an old electronic typewriter. The sound comes from
rubbing the wings together about 10 times a second.
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Great Green Bush-cricket - typical call (1 sec. divisions)
In hot weather, it can be much faster, rubbing the
wings together almost 20 times a second, when it sounds
similar to that of a cone-head. |

25kb |

25kb |

354kb |
Great Green Bush-cricket - fast
call (1 sec. divisions) |

32kb |

31kb |

453kb |
Dark Bush-cricket:
The familiar ‘chip’ call of this species
is clearly audible without a detector, but with one
the range is greatly increased to 15 or more metres.
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Dark Bush-cricket - typical call
(1 sec. divisions)
The normal sound heard on the detector is similar
to a short croak, as it briefly rubs its wings together
for about 1/10th second, repeated at 1-2 second intervals.
There is an aggression call when two males meet and
challenge each other, which is an extended ‘growl’,
lasting a second or two. |

34kb |

34kb |

486kb |

Dark Bush-cricket - challenging
call (1 sec. divisions)
Grey Bush-cricket:
Without a detector the call is virtually
inaudible above background sounds, even at very close
range of just a few metres. With a detector, it is
clearly audible to 15 metres or more. The sound is
a slow ‘chuffing’ like a steam train,
as it rubs its wings together around three times a
second.
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34kb |

34kb |

493kb |

Grey Bush-cricket (1 sec. divisions)
Bog Bush-cricket:
Whilst the stridulation is discernable
by ear, it is much more easily heard with a detector,
and from over 15 metres. It has a distinct ‘chuffing’
sound, rather like a steam train under load. It is
around twice as fast as the Grey, as it rubs its wings
together some six times a second.
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35kb |

35kb |

503kb |

Bog Bush-cricket (1 sec. divisions)
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35kb |

34kb |

487kb |
Long-winged Cone-head and Short-winged Cone-head:
Both species have a faint call to the human ear, but
it is loud with a detector. The calls of these two cone-heads
are distinctive from those of other bush-crickets (except
perhaps a fast Great Green Bush-cricket on a hot day),
but they can be sufficiently similar that confirmation
of which cone-head species is present should be made
by visual inspection.
Both have a very long call, often continuing for several
minutes or more. The Short-winged call is almost invariably
interspersed with a brief section as if slowing down
for a second or two before speeding right back up again.
The Long-winged call generally does not have a slowing
down section. However, Long-winged calls have occasionally
been heard which include the slowing down part, and
Short-winged calls have been heard which persist for
2 or 3 minutes without it. Chris Haes observed a Long-winged
male whilst he had a bat detector trained on it, and
noted that the slowing down section corresponded with
the insect changing its orientation. This may also be
the case for the Short-winged Cone-head. |
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Short-winged Cone-head - typical
persistent call (½ sec. divisions) |

26kb |

25kb |

358kb |

Short-winged Cone-head - with slowdown
between division
3 and 5 before speeding up again (½ sec. divisions)
For both the Long-winged and the Short-winged Cone-head,
the wing is rubbed together about 20-25 times a second
during the slowed down section. In the typical call,
the wings are rubbed together 2 or 3 times this speed,
possibly up to 60-70 times a second. |

33kb |

32kb |

459kb |
Long-winged Cone-head - typical
persistent call (½ sec. divisions) |

36kb |

36kb |

515kb |
Long-winged Cone-head - with slowdown
between
division 2 and 4 before speeding up again (½ sec. divisions)
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38kb |

38kb |

546kb |
Large Cone-head:
I am grateful to Paul Stancliffe for supplying a copy
of the recording he made of the first natural UK occurrence
of this species. The call is a constant electrical buzz,
similar to a mains hum, as the wings are rubbed together
just over 80 times a second. |
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Large Cone-head (¼ sec. divisions)
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56kb |

60kb |

519kb |
Speckled bush-cricket:
This call can only be heard with a bat detector. Each
insect makes a distinctive tick, repeated every few
seconds, as it simply flicks its wings together for
about 1/70th second. However, as it is frequent, and
the call is heard at up to 15 metres or more, you are
likely to hear a series of many clicks from all the
insects within range. |
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Speckled Bush-cricket (1 sec. divisions)
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31kb |

31kb |

447kb |

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Wildlife information
for wildlife conservation
ERCCIS
Five Acres, Allet, Truro, Cornwall, TR4 9DJ
Phone: (01872) 240777
Fax: (01872) 225476
Email: erccis@cornwt.demon.co.uk
Website: http://www.cornwallwildliferecords.co.uk
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