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Characteristics and Orders
Insects Characteristics and Orders
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What You Should Know About Insects …
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Taxonomy Kingdom – Animalia Phylum – Arthropoda Class - Insecta
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Arthropods Include: spiders (Arachnids), ticks, scorpions, millipedes, crustaceans, horseshoe crab, centipedes and of course INSECTS 4
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Insects Are Arthropods
Insects are the largest group of Arthropods - 900,000 different species On the planet for 350,000,000 yrs Jointed appendages (bendable) Segmented bodies Exoskeleton of Chitin that must be molted to grow
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All Insects Have… Three body regions – head, thorax, and abdomen
One pair antenna (head) Six legs or 3 pairs (thorax) One-two pairs of wings (thorax)
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Head 2 antennae (feel, hear and smell) 1,000 sensory cells
(One species of moth can smell one molecule EIGHT miles away) 2 compound eyes - each has 30,000 lenses 3 ocelli - simple eyes to sense light and dark Special mouthparts - several specific designs
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Antenna One Pair on head Jointed Sensory (smell) Called “feelers”
Filiform most common shape (segments = size) Come in many shapes FILIFORM
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Antenna Modifications- Draw a couple
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Mouth part types Draw a sample of each
Chewing, sucking, piercing, lapping and sponging
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Chewing
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Youtube video
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Sucking
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Youtube video
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Piercing
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Youtube Video
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Lapping
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Youtube video
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Sponging
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Youtube video
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Thorax 3 pair of jointed legs covered in sensory hairs. They are more than 110x more sensitive than our tongues. 2 pair of wings, if present
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Insect Legs Examples: Digging, jumping, predatory and swimming
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There are ALWAYS SIX legs, and they are attached to the THORAX
Count the Legs! There are ALWAYS SIX legs, and they are attached to the THORAX
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Wings or No Wings Most adults have 2 pairs
Some insects are wingless (silverfish, fleas, some termites and ants)
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A network of Veins strengthens wings MEMBRANEOUS (clear) WINGS
More on Wings A network of Veins strengthens wings MEMBRANEOUS (clear) WINGS
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Some Wings Are Covered With Powdery Scales
BUTTERFLIES & MOTHS
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Wings May Be Modified Order Diptera (flies)
2nd pair of wings modified into HALTERES Used for balance Makes flies hard to catch!
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Beetle Wings Meet in straight line down the abdomen
ELYTRA Hard Forewing called Elytra Meet in straight line down the abdomen Membranous hindwings folded underneath (flight)
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Abdomen Houses reproductive organs and digestive system
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Evolution of Insects
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1. Oldest All insects began as wingless
Less than 1 % of insects belong to this category They go through incomplete metamorphosis SILVERFISH: THYSANURA
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Youtube: Silverfish
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2. Development of Wings They have wings, but they can not fold them = harder to escape predators Still go through incomplete metamorphosis
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Youtube: Dragonfly
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3. Development of Flexing Wings
They have wings and can fold them. This allows them to go more places. Incomplete metamorphosis Examples: Grasshopper, praying mantids
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Youtube: Mantid
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4. Complete Metamorphosis
Egg-larva-pupa- adult 80% of insects Completely different animal Key factor to increasing diversity and survival Taps two different food sources
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Youtube: Complete Metamorphosis
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Why Study Insects? 10 million insects for every human on Earth.
Over 90% of all animals are invertebrates
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Insects are helpful Decompose waste
Control other insects- good ones eat bad Pollination Make products: silk and honey Till soil
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Insects are harmful Spread disease - yellow fever, rocky mountain fever Destroy crops- 90 billion dollars worth of damage each year Locust attack- 10 billion left devastation miles wide and long
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CIRCLE THE INSECTS
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INSECT ORDERS INSECTS WITH WINGS
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Why Can’t I Call All of Them Bugs?
EVERY BUG is an insect, but NOT ALL INSECTS are bugs! True BUGS are in the Order HEMIPTERA Posterior thorax is triangular; called SCUTELLUM Last 3rd of wing CLEAR
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Which of these are BUGS? ALL
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More Hemipterans Assassin Bug Water Boatman Giant Water Bug
Leaf Hopper
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Coleoptera Called beetles Tough exoskeleton Forewings called Elytra
Fly with membranous hindwings Larva called grubs Cucumber beetle Ladybird beetle Rhinoceros beetle
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Ephemeroptera Called Mayflies Juveniles are aquatic; called naiads
Adults found near water & don’t feed Adults reproduce & die in 24 hours Soft bodies with 2 long Ceri (tail fibers) ADULT NAIAD
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Diptera Contains mosquitoes & flies One pair functional wings
Club-shaped halteres for balance Bodies often hairy Green Bottle fly Hover Fly Fruit Fly Aedes Mosquito
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EARWIG EATING CATERPILLAR
Dermaptera Called earwigs Long, flat bodies Forceps (pincers) on end of abdomen Short, hard forewings (membranous wings folded underneath Large jaws (mandibles) on head PINCERS EARWIG EATING CATERPILLAR
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Orthoptera Grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, katydids Very long bodies
Rear legs modified for jumping Females with egg laying tube (ovipositor on end of abdomen) Often communicate with chirping sounds
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Lepidoptera Moths, butterflies, & skippers
Siphoning mouthparts coiled under head Powdery scales on wings Butterflies fold wings flat above body at rest Moths are night active Important plant pollinators
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Neuroptera Lacewings Net veined wings Small, delicate insects
Long antenna Predators on other insects May feed on nectar
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Thysanoptera Thrips Two pairs of fringed wings Feed on plant sap
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Isoptera Termites Live in colonies Feed on wood
Soft bodies & short antenna Castes – workers, soldiers, kings, and queen
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Mecoptera Scorpion flies Last abdominal segments curved like scorpion
Two pairs of narrow wings Head elongated into a beak (rostrum) Long antenna
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Homoptera Cicadas, leaf hoppers, wingless aphids
If wings present, held roof like over body & membranous Piercing-sucking mouthparts Cicada Leafhopper
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Odonata Dragonflies & damselflies
Dragonflies hold clear wings spread perpendicular to body at rest Damselflies hold clear wings together over abdomen
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Plecoptera Stoneflies Aquatic nymphs Aerial adults are short lived
Make drumming sound to find mates
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Hymenoptera Bees, ants, wasps Narrow waist connects thorax & abdomen
Abdomen curved downward May have stinger on end of abdomen Carpenter bee Red ant Yellow jacket
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INSECT ORDERS WINGLESS INSECTS
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Thysanura Called Silverfish
Found around houses or outside under stones or wood Fast runners Damage books Secretive and active at night. Flat, long bodies Long antennae Three, long, tail like appendages
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Siphonaptera Fleas Ectoparasites Bodies laterally compressed
Enlarged hind jumping legs Very short antenna
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Collembola Called springtails Small & soft bodied
Furcula (jumping mechanism) on abdomen Furcula folds under the body at rest Found in decaying plant material
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Anoplura Sucking lice Parasites of mammals Very small
Head and body lice are examples Attracted to children’s fine hair Carry disease
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Mallophaga Biting lice External parasites on birds & mammals
Broad head & flattened body Feed on dead skin, feathers, and fur
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CHANGE IN FORM FROM EGG TO ADULT
Metamorphosis CHANGE IN FORM FROM EGG TO ADULT
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INCOMPLETE METAMORPHOUS Insects change shape gradually!
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Insects with Incomplete Metamorphosis
EGG NYMPH ADULT Siphonaptera (fleas) Isoptera (termites) Orthoptera (grasshoppers & crickets) Hemiptera (true bugs) Homoptera (cicadas & hoppers) Wings NOT fully developed 71
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Youtube Video
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Complete Metamorphosis Four stages that all look different
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Insects with Complete Metamorphosis
EGG LARVA PUPA ADULT Coleoptera (beetles) Hymenoptera (bees, ants, wasps) Diptera (flies) Lepidoptera (butterflies)
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Youtube Video
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Paul!!
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