Rapa Nui Cricket vs Giant Amazonian Cricket

Side-by-side species comparison

Attribute Rapa Nui Cricket Giant Amazonian Cricket
Scientific Name Paratrigonidium rapanui Brachytrupes megacephalus
Order Orthoptera Orthoptera
Family Trigonidiidae Gryllidae
Size 0.5-1 cm 35-55 mm
Habitat Underground Rivers & Streams
Diet Detritivores Root Feeders
Regions Chile South America (Brazil, Peru, Colombia)
Conservation Critically Endangered Least Concern

Rapa Nui Cricket

A tiny ground cricket endemic to Easter Island (Rapa Nui). It lives in leaf litter and stone crevices on this remote Pacific island.

💡

Did You Know?

Easter Island has very few native insects, making each endemic species extremely significant for conservation.

Giant Amazonian Cricket

A large burrowing cricket with a disproportionately large head and powerful mandibles used for excavating deep soil burrows. It is nocturnal and emerges at night to forage for plant material. Males produce a loud, resonant chirp from their burrow entrances.

💡

Did You Know?

Its burrowing activities help aerate tropical soils, playing an ecological role similar to earthworms in temperate regions.