BirdNET+ Taxonomy

v0.2-Jun2026

← Back to browse

Oceanic Field Cricket
Matthew Connors (cc-by-nc)

Oceanic Field Cricket

Teleogryllus oceanicus
BirdNET IDBN14781
Taxon groupInsecta
iNat observations62
Image sourceiNaturalist
/taxonomy/api/species/Teleogryllus%20oceanicus
Loading…

Description wikipedia

Teleogryllus oceanicus, commonly known as the Australian, Pacific or oceanic field cricket, is a cricket found across Oceania and in coastal Australia from Carnarvon in Western Australia and Rockhampton in north-east Queensland T. oceanicus populations in Hawaii arose through human-assisted introduction. It is currently unknown whether T. oceanicus was introduced to Hawaii in 1877 by area trade ships, or 1500 years ago with the original Polynesian settlers. Microsatellite comparisons support the idea that the Hawaiian T. oceanicus colonization originated in the Western islands and then spread East. T. oceanicus crickets are black to dark brown in coloration with longitudinal stripes on the back of the head. Males average between 28 and 35 mm in length, and the females are typically longer due to the ovipositor with an average of 33–42 mm. These crickets are typically found on soil ground hiding in fissures or holes in the terrain, and are typically only found in high numbers in landscapes that provide a good deal of cover. T. oceanicus may also be referred to as the black field cricket, a common name it shares with Teleogryllus commodus. The two species are nearly morphologically indistinguishable, the exception being that T. oceanicus males have a greater number of file teeth on their wings. T. oceanicus was originally regarded taxonomically as a geographic race of T. commodus, but was later recognized as a distinct species as growing evidence of reproductive isolation and differences in calling sound were reported. The two species' geographic ranges remain mostly separate with the exception of small overlap zones in Eastern Australia. There have been no reports of hybridization between the species in this overlap zone, thought to be due to differences in calling song acting as a pre-zygotic barrier. No character displacement has been observed in either species in this overlap region. Unlike T. commodus which lays eggs only a single time per season, T. oceanicus crickets breed year round.

Common Names (5 locales)

ar صرصور الحقل الأوقيانوسي
en Oceanic Field Cricket
id Ternak jangkrik
zh 夏威夷蟋蟀
zh-CN 滨海油葫芦

External Identifiers

iNaturalist#903834
GBIF1723426
NCBI128161