There are about 2,000 species of robins. Including grasshopper (Cryptotympana atrata), Platypleura kaempferi, song cicada (Oncotumpana maculicollis), Yunnan bald-horned cicada (scientific name: Homoptera), grasshopper, spotted cicada, thin-winged cicada, Takasago bearcicada, Taiwan tawny cicada, black-winged cicada, ? Red-eyed Cicada, Taiwan Tuan Black Cicada, Shanxi Ji Cicada? , tortoise pattern, autumn cicada, etc.
The robin is distributed in temperate and tropical regions, inhabiting deserts, grasslands and forests. In addition to the three ambrosia cicadas that appear every year in midsummer - moth cicadas and other species of the genus there are also periodic cicadas.
Expanded Information:
Growth and reproduction of the robin
The robin will turn from a nymph to an adult in June to July each year then lay eggs in just a few days, a period of time that usually lasts between one and two years from the time the eggs start and the process of the wakame living in the ground, all the way up to the last shedding of their shells to become adults, and their loud song in the trees.
In cicadas, the larvae, also known as "wakame," make a sound that attracts females to mate with them, and they lay their eggs in their pointed ovipositor tubes, which they insert into the trees, where they remain until the next year, when they hatch and then live in the soil for several years or even a dozen years before they break out of their shells.
Over the course of its long life, the cicada has to undergo a lot of shedding of its shell, and then one time when it becomes an adult, it will make a sound, and the sound of the male cicada is a high frequency of hundreds of times a second, constantly vibrating the two pieces of the membrane located in the abdomen to make a sharp and loud sound.