“…Although the main points of Grylloidea agonistic and reproductive behavior have been extensively studied in the last decades (Alexander and Otte 1967, Bell 1980, Evans 1988, de Mello and dos Reis 1994, Prado 2006, Funk 2016, Lunichkin et al 2016, few Ethology of the cricket Endecous (Endecous) chape Souza-Dias & de Mello, 2017 (Orthoptera: Grylloidea: Phalangopsidae) I: Agonistic and reproductive behavior studies have focused on the family Phalangopsidae. To date, 10 of the 1005 species of Phalangopsidae have had their reproductive behavior described (Alexander and Otte 1967, Dambach and Lichtenstein 1978, Boake 1984, de Mello and dos Reis 1994, Nischk and Otte 2000, Gnaspini and Pelegatti-Franco 2002, Prado 2006, Zefa et al 2008, Souza-Dias et al 2015, Lunichkin et al 2016, and only three species have had their agonistic behavior studied (Boake 1984, de Mello and dos Reis 1994, Prado 2006). This diversity in the behavioral repertoire is likely to be expanded when other species have been studied, particularly since Phalangopsidae are widely distributed, occupying different strata of tropical and subtropical forests, litter, rock crevices, and caves (Desutter-Grandcolas 1995, Bolfarini and Bichuette 2015, Souza-Dias et al 2017, Cigliano et al 2018, and also have diverse morphological variation in structures related to reproduction (Prado 2006, de Mello 2007, Zefa et al 2008, Lunichkin et al 2016.…”