some common insect “orders”

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Some Common Insect “Orders”

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Some Common Insect “Orders”. Silverfish and their allies. 47 North American (NA) species, 580 species worldwide (WW). Primitive, wingless. Body regions are not easily distinguished. Antennae & repro appendages almost as long as head-body. Do not undergo complete metamorphosis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Some Common

Insect “Orders”

Page 2: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Silverfish and their allies.• 47 North American (NA) species,

580 species worldwide (WW).• Primitive, wingless.• Body regions are not easily

distinguished.• Antennae & repro appendages

almost as long as head-body.• Do not undergo complete

metamorphosis.• Cuticle is not well developed, so

silverfish must inhabit high humidity environment.

Page 3: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Silverfish and Allies• Largely nocturnal• Related “firebats” are of

tropical origins.• This is the only widely

known Order of truly primitive insects.

• Primitive (& interesting) fertilization requiring high-humidity….

Page 4: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Mayflies & allies.• 51NA, 580WW• These are the most primitive

widely known winged insects.• Larvae (left):

– are long-lived aquatic detritavores– breathe through cuticle & gills– have shape & habits for particular

habitat– remain larvae for 7-36 months.

• Adults (next slide) live just long enough to reproduce.

Page 5: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Mayflies, etc.• Mass emergences occur in

warm weather, usually in early evening.

• After larval stage:– Flying sub-adults (subimagoes)– Flying adults (imagoes)

• Full adults typically move toward maximum light and mate in swarms.

• Eggs (or, in a few species, newborn larvae) are always placed into water.

Page 6: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Dragonflies & damselflies

• 450NA, 4950WW.• Primitive flying insects.• Adults long-lived fliers;

larvae long-lived aquatic predators

• Feeding strategies– Adults are aerial

insectivores (may have > 28,000 “eyelets”; may fly at 40-50kph).

– Juveniles are stalking or sit-&-wait predators that often dominate ephemeral aquatic habitats.

Page 8: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Grasshoppers, crickets, etc.• 1018NA, 12500WW• 3rd leg pair often modified

for jumping• Orthopterans show many

variations on that theme...• Communication

– Crickets rub outer wings– Grasshoppers rub jumping

legs against outer wings– Females locate by tuning to

the “null”…• Many agricultural pests!

Page 9: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Migratory locusts: awesome grasshopper pests

• Populations often live in sedentary state, but under density stress they may change color, metabolism, and behavior– and move out!

• Swarms can be enormous:– Morocco, 1955:

20kmX250km– Algeria, 1890: more than

two trillion killed• Eat every green plant-part!

Page 10: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Walkingsticks

• 27NA, 2000 WW.• Variable body form.• Arboreal folivores.• Most rely on

camouflage & stillness to avoid predators (though some have chemical defenses).

• Regenerate lost limbs.• Repro & gender ratios.• Sexual dimorphism.

Page 11: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Cockroaches

• 3000-4000 WW• Roaches are very

ancient (400mybp):– Scavengers– Perhaps earliest

cellulose processors• Lay (or carry) egg cases

of 2 to 30-40 eggs.• Control of the beasts….

Page 12: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Mantids• Mantids, top predators,

have long, cylindrical bodies (1-17cm), triangular heads, and “preying” arms.

• Tropical species are more varied….

• Here are some neo-Darwinian meditations on mantid mating...

Page 13: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Termites.• 41NA, 1900 WW• Cellulose processors; symbiants….• Thin cuticles; high humidity.…• Nest constructions:

– Protection, water, humidity, thermoregulation

» Shelter for other animals….

• Africa’s Macrotermes can have > 2,000,000 individuals/mound.

• The primary herbivores of arthropod world; consider w/ants.

Page 14: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Termites: founding & living in colonies

• Swarming….• Production of nymphs• Colonial & eusocial:

– A colony includes reproductives (often, plus secondary reproductives), workers, and soldiers.

– Both genders of larvae are totipotent at hatching.

– Growing nymphs are locked into body-forms & immaturity by nutrition and hormones (contrast w/ ants, etc.).

– In most species, workers & soldiers have multiple forms.

Page 15: Some Common Insect “Orders”

True bugs• 4500NA, 23000WW.• Great variety, but all have:

– sucking mouth parts,– hard anterior wings partly covering

back wings.• The Order includes herbivores

and predators.• The Order is agriculturally &

medically significant.• Some plant-eaters have

generational differences correlated with plant developmental stages.

Page 16: Some Common Insect “Orders”

More on true bugs

• The Order includes bedbugs, stink bugs, water bugs, water striders, and much more....

• A few nasty notes on bedbugs:– Greatly flattened.– Multiple piercings in search of

surface capillary; delayed itching.– Slow to starve.– Reproduce by “traumatic

insemination.”

Page 17: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Cicadas (plus aphids, scale insects, leafhoppers, etc.)

• 6500NA, 32000WW• Bug-like (piercing) mouth

parts.• Eat exclusively plant juices

(…excess sugars, protein and nitrogen deficiencies, symbiants…).

• The cicada life cycle– 2, 14, & 17-year cycles in USA– Emerge (great swarms in some

species); short adult lives….

Page 18: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Beetles!!!!!

• 28600NA, 290000WW.• Range in size from 0.025mm to

150mm.• Hard forewings cover lacy hind-

(flight-) wings• The most successful animal Order!• Larvae are eating-machine grubs;

adults are highly varied, including predators, coprovores, sangrivores, herbivores, omnivores, …

Page 19: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Examples of beetle

lifeways:

• Ladybird beetles: hunters of scale insects & small caterpillars (eat about 3000).

• Lightening bugs: Only male goes through complete metamorphosis; females are glowworms.

• Some beetles are ant-colony invaders.

• Dung beetles (left) exploit large mammal feces.

• Micromalthus debilis over-winters as larvae; some pupate; others reproduce as larvae (small larvae or one big egg…).

Page 20: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Butterflies, moths, etc.

• 13700NA, 180000WW• Large scaly wings.• Extreme 2-stage life:

– Caterpillars eat & have simple body plan. Most are very food-specific. Many are agriculturally significant.

– Adults move and reproduce. Many have short lives, but consider the migratory monarch (left).

Page 21: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Butterflies, moths, etc.

• Long proboscis allows access to nectar.

• Most important adult taste organs on legs; this helps identify target flowers.

• Erratic flight patterns help avoid predators.

• Some large moths (upper left) navigate by moonlight & are endangered because of yard-light proliferation.

Page 22: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Wasps, bees, ants(hymenopterans)

• 17500MA, 103000WW• Some commonalities include:

– stinging, nest-building, colonial lifeways– diploid females, haploid males

• Ancestral hymenopterans were like sawflies, gall wasps, etc. (top).

• Early descendents were parasitoid wasps (center).

• Solitary hunters (bottom) arose from parasitoids.

• Colonial wasps are more derived.

Page 23: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Hymenopterans (cont.)• Bees.

– Lifestyles almost as varied as wasps (solitary, colonial…).

– Honeybees: c. 40k & 1 queen per hive. Males from unfertilized eggs. Eggs rapidly into grubs; grow 6 days, pupate 12 days; nurse houseworker guard forager (@ 2-3 weeks). Queen designated by care.

• Ants are mostly predators….– Leafcutters, pastoral ants (honeypots)….– Slaver ants….– Driver ants (20 million workers, 65kg)…

• Founding a new colony. Nuptial flight; males die; small, timid 1st workers….

Page 24: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Flies, mosquitoes, etc.

• 16130NA, 85000WW• Only 1 pair of wings.

(Some “flies” are wingless & parasitic.)

• Larvae generally legless (aquatic in mosquitoes).

• This group has extreme medical importance!

Page 25: Some Common Insect “Orders”

Fleas• 238NA, 1370WW• Small, hard-bodied,

wingless; perhaps descended from dung-flies (may have arisen during pre-dinosaur mammalian radiation).

• Vectors of several important diseases (e.g., plague).