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Rupert et al. fig 21-23 Collembola Thysanura Ephemeroptera Odonata
Neoptera “Apterygota” Pterygota Entognatha Insecta Hexapoda
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Collembola (springtails)
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Class Insecta Apterygota – silverfish and fire brats
Pterygota – everything else
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Order Odonata Dragonflies and Damselflies
Fossils data back 300 my Some had wingspan of 720mm
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Damselfly (zygoptera)
On-line identification key: Dragonfly (Anisoptera) Damselfly (zygoptera)
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Together with the mayflies form the paleoptera
Cannot fold wings onto back, wings finely veined Aquatic, hemimetabolous larva (wings evolved from modified gills?)
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Odonata Voracious predators as larvae and adults
Larvae are dominant predator in fishless systems Adults usually found near water Food availability Territories for mating, oviposition sites
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Neoptera (= new wings) Can fold their wings flat onto their back
Wing venation reduced, simplified
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O. Plecoptera (pleco=stone)
Larvae found in clean flowing water (used as important indicators of water quality) Larvae are predators, scavengers adults feed little, if at all, live for only a few days
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Orders Orthoptera, Phasmida, Grylloblatteria, Dermaptera
= the orthopteroids, the lower neoptera Polyphyletic group united by similarity in mouthparts and great abundance of malpighian tubules
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Orthoptera = grasshoppers, crickets, katydids, locusts
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Orthoptera: ortho=perpendicular
Very common, have jumping legs Some are important crop pests Have well-developed organs for sound detection and production (mating calls) Ear
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Leaf mimic katydid
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O. Phasmida – leaf and sticks insects
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Phasmida Extraordinary mimics of vegetation Can be parthenogenic
Sold as pets!
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O. Grylloblattaria – ice bugs and rock crawlers
Gryllus = cricket-like Blattaria = cockroach-like Wingless Thought to be ancestral to Orthoptera and Blatteria
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O. Dermaptera = earwigs Common earwig = European import
Leathery forewings, membranous hindwings omnivorous
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Zoraptera Tropical Live in rotting wood
Eat fungal hyphae, tiny arthropods Poorly studied
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Isoptera - termites
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