Banded Cricket
Gryllodes sigillatus
The banded cricket (Gryllodes sigillatus) is a small tropical cricket used widely as a feeder insect for reptiles, amphibians, invertebrates, poultry, and some fish. It is tan to brown with darker banding, active movement, and the familiar chirping of mature males. Compared with some feeder crickets, it is often chosen for commercial production because it ships well and can be raised in dense colonies when temperature, food, and ventilation are controlled.
Keeping banded crickets is mostly about clean insect culture. Breeders use warm bins with egg-laying substrate, dry hiding material, steady moisture sources, and a diet that can be gut-loaded before feeding them to other animals. Poor ventilation, wet waste, and mold can crash a colony quickly, so sanitation matters as much as food. Escape control is also practical; loose crickets can hide, chirp, and chew soft materials. For animal keepers, healthy crickets should be active, appropriately sized, and fed nutritious foods before they become prey.