Why do crickets chirp?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Males attract females
Cooling down body temperature — Wrong. Chirping doesn't cool body. It's acoustic mating signal produced by wing stridulation (rubbing wings together).
Males attract females ✓ — Correct! Acoustic mating call! Male crickets chirp to attract females. Mechanism: stridulation—scraping file (serrated vein) against scraper (wing edge). Different chirp patterns: (1) Calling song—attract distant females. (2) Courtship song—close-range. (3) Rivalry song—male competition. Only males chirp (females silent). Chirp rate temperature-dependent—warmer = faster (can estimate temperature from chirps!). Each species unique frequency/rhythm. Females choose mates by chirp quality. Chirping costs energy, attracts predators—honest signal!
Warning predators away — Wrong. Chirping doesn't deter predators—actually attracts them (and parasites). Chirping is mating call, with predation as costly trade-off.
More Animal Behavior questions
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