File: 
<metamorphosis.htm> < (Entomology), (Invertebrates),
(General Index)>      <Invertebrate
Bibliography>       <Glossary>      <Site Description>        < Home>
 
 
 
 
    Introduction                                                                                                                                                  Contents►
 
| Entomology:  METAMORPHOSIS
  1   Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Entomology Metamorphosis (Contact)          Please CLICK on underlined
  categories to view and on included illustrations to enlarge:             Depress Ctrl/F to search for
  subject matter: | 
 
 
| General
  Characteristics of Metamorphosis             Insects attain maximum size by
  undergoing a succession of molts or ecdyses. The number of molts that an insect
  passes through is quite constant for the species, and the form assumed by the
  animal between any two ecdyses is called an instar. The animal's existence is thus made up of a
  succession of instars (growth) during which the insect is immature, followed
  by the attainment of the final adult instar (metamorphosis). In the
  simplest and most generalized insects the instars resemble one another and
  only differ from the adult in the absence of wings and the incomplete
  development of the reproductive system. Where the adult is primitively
  wingless, as in silverfish and springtails the change from young to adult is
  so slight as to be ignored, and metamorphosis, involving only a development
  of the reproductive system, is usually considered to be absent. The insect
  orders in this category may be grouped under the Ametabola. 
 
 
 
             This resting stage is really one
  of much physiological and developmental activity, and it is here that many
  larval tissues, e.g. the muscles and the alimentary canal, are broken down by
  phagocytic or other processes and the new adult tissue is constructed from
  many growth centers, usually called imaginal discs. The
  change from larva to pupa is often accompanied by a period of inactivity at
  the end of the last larval instar.              The origin of the phenomenon of holometaboly
  is vague. That it is associated with divergent specializations of larvae
  and adults in varying degrees is from observation.  Therefore, it is not unexpected to find among the orders
  composing this group, as, for instance, in many Coleoptera, larvae that are
  nymph-like in that they are well cuticularized and have well-developed legs,
  and mouthparts resembling those of the adults.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
             The molting which result is the
  route by which either further juvenile stages or the final adult stage can be
  attained. In the presence of the secretion of the corpora allata the juvenile
  condition results.  When these glands
  stop functioning, usually at the end of the larval period, the molting
  process, still activated by the prothoracic gland, gives rise to the adult.   -------------------------------------------               There are four types of metamorphosis (1) Ametabolous, (2)
  Paurometabolous, (3) Hemimetabolous and (4) Holometabolous.             Ametabolous
  Metamorphosis. -- In this type the only
  appreciable difference from the immature to the adult is the maturation of
  the sex organs (e.g., silverfish)             Paurometabolous
  Metamorphosis. -- Here the various
  mymphs closely resemble the adult except for body proportions.  The steps are egg to nymphs to adult
  (e.g., grasshopper, milkweed bug).             Hemimetabolous
  Metamorphosis. -- All the
  Hemimetabolaare aquatic.  The steps
  are egg to naiad to adult.  The naiad
  is very different from the adult in appearance (e.g., dragonfly, mayfly,
  stonefly).             The wings are developed externally
  in both the hemi- and paurometabolous insects, and these two are often
  considered together under the Paurometabola. 
  The developing wing is called a wingpad.             Holometabolous
  Metamorphosis. -- Here the steps are
  egg to larva to pupa and adult.  Wings
  are developed internally beneath the cuticula.  The pupal is often called the "resting stage," but
  this in inaccurate because thee is a complete histolysis of larval tissues
  and a reconstruction to the adult.             There are five larval types found in the Holometabola:             Campodeiform
  larvae
  are extremely active and
  usually predatory.  They have a
  flattened body with a prognathous head, and their thoracic legs are well
  developed for running.  Their jaws are
  designed for cutting and tearing. 
  Their cerci and antennae are often well developed (e.g., many beetles,
  neuropterans and trichopterans:  Fig. ent73).              
  Eruciform larvae are
  the opposite of campodeiform by being sluggish, like caterpillars.  They have a hypognathous round body.  The head is well developed but with very
  short antennae, and with thoracic legs and abdominal prolegs (e.g.,
  Lepidoptera, Mecoptera and some Hymenoptera: Fig. ent70).               Scarabaeiform larvae
  inhabit the soil or plant tissues, and some species are enclosed in
  tunnels.  They are quite helpless
  grubs especially when exposed on the surface of the soil.  They are hypognathous with a usually
  curved body (e.g., June beetle: Fig. ent72).                 Vermiform
  larvae are very advanced with a
  reduced head.  The body is elongated
  and wormlike, legless (e.g., maggots: Fig. ent71).               Elateriform larvae are prognathous with a
  hard and elongated cylindrical body (e.g., wireworms: Fig. ent74)     -------------------------------------------               The adult is the perfect or sexual
  stage of an insect.  In this stage the
  sexual organs mature and locomotory appendages are sufficient for
  propagation.  The storage of energy varies
  considerably among species.  Some
  adults can only take water or liquid; some adults use fat bodies that were
  stored in a previous immature stage, and some, like chironomid midges, cannot
  even imbibe liquids.  Much of
  metamorphosis is directed toward producing an adult that can propagate the
  species.             Types of Reproduction.
  -- Adult insects show various types of reproduction.  In oviporous reproduction an egg is
  formed and the female lays the egg covered by a chorion.  In polyembryony there is a lot of
  division in the egg to give many individuals from one egg.  In vivipary the insect is born
  alive although its origin was still from an egg.  In parthenogenesis the young are produced form infertile eggs,
  as in aphids.  Some species do not
  have males, as in the white-fringed beetle. 
  Some may have a combination of fertile and infertile periods.  Paedogenesis involves
  reproduction in immature stages.  The
  maggot young fasten themselves on the parent and consume them.  Several generations may pass in this
  manner.             Egg Shape Variation.
  -- The various kinds of sculpturing found on insect eggs are formed by
  epithelial cells.               Many insects have the means of
  fixing their eggs so that they will have a proper environment for
  development.  Examples are nits, the
  eggs of lice, that are glued to the hair of their host and the ovipositor can
  cut holes into wood where the eggs are laid. 
  Lacewings lay their eggs on a stalk, which is a piece of silk with the
  egg attached to the end.  However,
  some insects depend wholly on large numbers of eggs for survival of the
  species.             Molting
  Process. -- The entire cuticle is
  cast off and a new one is formed. 
  This includes lenses of the eyes, mandibles, linings of the fore and
  hind guts, tracheal trunks and linings of the genital chamber.  Hypodermal cells must lay down the new
  cuticula.  At the same time the cells
  must secrete a fluid, which will erode away much of the endocuticle.  This can be resorbed by the hypodermal
  cells and used again.  When most of
  the cuticula has eroded away the insect can molt.  New cuticula is very soft and pliable.  It remains so for several hours before
  being oxidized during which time it can be expanded to accomodate the larger
  size of the insect.  When the insect
  casts its skin, the integument underneath is not pigmented and it remains
  white for an hour or more.             The instar is
  the form of an insect after the molt. 
  Following egg hatching there can be a first, second and more
  molts.  The number of instars varies
  but it is normally four.  Some insects
  can regress in molting (e.g., carpet beetle).   -------------------------------------------               The pupa is an immature stage in
  development of the Holometabola.  It
  is a stage of quiescence primarily even though there can be some movement as
  is typical of mosquitoes.  It is also
  the stage of breakdown of tissue and the buildup of others.  Various other names often assigned to this
  stage are chrysalis,
  puparium and
  cocoon.             There are three types of pupae:          (1) exarate,
  where the developing wings, mouthparts and legs are visible externally (e.g.,
  Hymenoptera and Coleoptera:  Figs. ent75 & ent76).            (2) obtect,
  where the mouthparts, legs and wings are seen as incompletely formed
  structures glued down as an integral part of the pupal case (e.g.,
  Lepidoptera: Fig. ent77).          (3)  coarctate, where an exarate pupa is
  formed within the last larval skin. 
  The exterior is generally smooth and seedlike (e.g., Diptera: Fig. ent78).       
   =============   | 
Introduction Contents►