Mottled bush crickets are a species of flightless cricket bushes that occur in much of Europe. This species is quite common, but its coloring and lifestyle are hidden, hidden in the bush, meaning it often goes unnoticed. This species was originally described as Locusta punctatissima in 1792.
Male songs, produced by rubbing the right wing into projections such as teeth in the left base, short (1 to 10 ms) and weak, at a frequency of 40 kHz, the best can be heard with the help of a bat detector. Unlike other cricket species, the female is able to respond to the male call with his own weak call, which draws the male to him.
Mottled bush crickets are common in most of Europe. Starting from the British Isles, France and Belgium in the west to the European part of Russia in the east, and from southern Scandinavia in the north to southern Italy, Bulgaria and Greece. Their distribution has been recorded as far south as Palestine.
I found this not far and not in Europe. This is found in lush bushes from Aceh which have dense forests.