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Bees, crickets, and mosquitoes make vocalizations by friction Friction vocalizations are very common, but the specific articulator construction is varied. The articulation of crickets consists of a sound file (cuò) and a friction sheet. When flapping the wings, the left wing is stacked on the right wing, and the sound file and friction plate rub against each other to produce a sound.
The locust's articulators are called the sound file and the scraper, respectively, and when the two rub together, they also cause the forewings to vibrate and make a clattering sound.
Vocalizations from the mouth Like a moth making a sound by the inner lip, when the pharynx and muscles contract to form airflow in and out of the mouth, the airflow is placed when the inner lip is blocked, making a sound like a human "whistle".
Flapping the wings The sound of the flapping of the wings of an insect when it flies, the vibration of the bone fragments in the thorax, and the flapping of the left and right wings against each other. Different species of insects fly at different frequencies of their wings, some insects reach 2,000 times per second, while butterflies are generally secondary, and the frequency range of sound that our human ears hear is 16 20,000 times per second, so we can hear the flap of mosquitoes' wings, but we can't hear the sound of butterflies dancing. In most cases, the sound of an insect spreading its wings vibrating has no special significance, but the sound of a female mosquito's wing flutter can cause a mating response in a male mosquito.
Frogs make vocalizations through the vibrations of the air sacs.
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How much? How do people speak? It's just that the two pieces of flesh membranes of the throat cause the air to vibrate and make a sound under the trembling of the muscles, or the muscles directly vibrate and make sounds, and the same is true for frogs, a big drum in the abdomen and throat, skin, vibration sounds, crickets may be belly skin like a drum, vibrating muscles will make a sound, and the legs may also help or something, probably that's it.
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Crickets "chirp" and frogs "quack".
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The cricket plays the violin, and the frog sings the bass.
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Crickets, squeaks, frogs.
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Hehehehehe, this number is funny, I guess you can't express it.
Crickets "squirt".
Frog "stick melon".
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Magpies will also call.
Magpies are adaptable birds that can be found in mountains and plains, in wilderness, farmland, suburbs, cities, parks and gardens. But a general rule is that where there is more human activity, the magpie population tends to be larger, and it is rare to find the species in the inaccessible dense forest. Magpies often move in large groups and in pairs, foraging in wilderness fields during the day and tall trees at night.
The apex of perch. Magpies are one of the most popular birds, and they like to build their nests in large trees next to houses and move around residential areas.
Magpies often move in small groups of 3 to 5 individuals, except during the breeding season, and often form large groups of dozens in autumn and winter. During the day, they often forage in open areas such as farmland, and in the evening, they fly to rest in the tall trees nearby, and sometimes they can be seen mingling with crows and jackdaws. Alert, there is often a bird in charge of guarding foraging, and even when foraging in pairs, most of them take turns to wait and forage.
When the male bird is looking for food on the ground, the female bird stands on a high place and watches, and the female bird takes food, the male bird watches, and if he finds danger, the watchful bird makes a scream and flies away with the foraging bird. The flight ability is strong and long-lasting, the whole body and tail are in a straight line when flying, the tail is slightly open, the wings are slowly agitated, the male and female birds often keep a certain distance, and when they are active on the ground, they move forward in a leaping style. The chirping is monotonous and loud, often chirping while flying.
When there is a group, the shouting is very noisy.
The diet is mixed, and the food composition changes with the season and environment, mainly feeding on animal foods such as insects in summer, and mainly feeding on plant fruits and seeds in other seasons. Common food species are locusts.
Grasshoppers, beetles.
Weevils, beetles, mantises.
Insects and larvae of Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Orthoptera, Hymenoptera and other insects such as ground tigers, bugs, ants, flies, snakes, etc., also eat nestlings and eggs. Plant foods are mainly the fruits and seeds of plants such as trees and shrubs, but also corn, sorghum, soybeans, peas, wheat and other crops.
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1. Qu Qu. It is an onomatopoeia for animal calls.
2. Start with the wings of crickets. The forewings of male crickets are asymmetrical on the left and right, with a tooth-like structure called a "sound file" on it, which is composed of folds and microhairs on the surface of the wings;
3. The two wings rub against each other to make a sound, and the cricket can control the angle at which the wings are raised, thereby changing the frequency of the control friction, so that different chirps are produced.
4. Crickets are only male and can chirp, and all females are "dumb". There are three main types of chirping, one is the most common sound we hear when a male calls a female, the second is the sound of a male noticing a female coming to his side and courting, and the other is the sound of two males meeting and fighting.
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Crickets use their wings to make sounds. The cricket has a short file-like spine on its right wing, and a knife-like thorn on its left wing. The left and right wings are closed one by one, rubbing against each other, and vibrating the wings to make a pleasant sound.
Crickets have different tones and frequencies that express different meanings. The loud, long, rhythmic cries of crickets are both a warning to the same sex against entry and a courtship.
Crickets usually start chirping in August in the summer, and are usually most cheerful in the field at 20°C, stopping in late October when the weather turns colder.
During the breeding season, male crickets will work harder to make sounds by moving their wings to attract the opposite sex.
Crickets burrow, often inhabit the surface, under the masonry, in the soil holes, among the grass. Crickets come out at night and feed on various crops, saplings, vegetables and fruits.
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Chirp. When a male adult of the genus Cricket chirps, his head faces the burrow, he lifts a pair of leathery compound wings upwards and separates them from the soft back of his body and membranous hindwings, rubbing against each other and chirping sounds. When the cricket makes a sound by rubbing, the burrow acts as a resonator that amplifies the chirp.
Some insects can use their wings or appendages with special structures to rub against each other to make sounds for communication, a vocal phenomenon called frictional vocalization. Most male crickets make vocalizations by a pair of hard, leathery forewings (also known as compound wings, wing caps, or wing sheaths). The ** of each compound wing has a thick vein, and there are comb-like serrated protrusions on the veins, like a file, so some people call it a sound file.
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