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| Entomology--The Study of
  Insects 1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Entomology Introduction & External Morphology (Contact) | 
 
 
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| General
  Characteristics of Insects Superfamilies, Families & Subfamilies |   Behavior, Ontogeny,
  Reproduction   |   | 
 
 
|             The
  present arrangement of insect orders is based on ever increasing complexity
  and presumed evolution of the most primitive [Thysanura] to the more advanced
  [Hymenoptera] (View All Orders.)  Previous and synonymous names of groups
  are included in parentheses. The Entognatha (Collembola) are
  included herein as a primitive insect precursor group.               Emphasis has been placed on
  morphological and behavioral characteristics that are easily discernable, and
  a simple diagrammatic style suitable for lecturing is used for most of the
  illustrations.  Insect families that
  are generally more abundant or which have the greatest economic or public
  health importance are treated in greatest detail.  A hand lens and a binocular microscope with  20X magnification are advisable for those
  wishing to view living and preserved specimens.  Greater detail on a particular group or species may be found by
  referring to publications listed in the References or through Internet
  searches.             This is a self-contained database with a minimum of
  links outside its limits.  Independent
  Internet searches are encouraged for greater detail on a particular insect
  group.  All information contained
  herein is for general public use according to the rules set by the Creative
  Common Deed.   General Characteristics of Insects             The term "Entomology" is derived from the
  Greek "Entoma" meaning "cutting-into."  Entomology then refers to the fact that
  insects have a resting stage and there is segmentation of the body.  Therefore, a complete translation might
  be, "Study of the individual divided into sections that forms in
  cysts."  Entomological
  instruction also has traditionally included the study and control of
  phytophagous mites, which cause extensive damage to food plants (See Arachnida).             With regard to the position of Insecta in the Animal
  Kingdom, it is estimated that there are at least 1,400,000 animal species in
  the Kingdom.  This may be broken down
  into Chordata = ca. 41,000; Mollusca = ca. 81,000; Protozoa = ca. 32,000 and
  Arthropoda other than Insecta = ca. 73,500. 
  The Arthropoda including Insecta have over 900,500 species.  In North America there have been over
  100,000 described insect species. 
  Most specialists will agree that many more exist that have not been
  described or discovered.  In addition
  there are many strains or races found withing a single insect species.  Recent DNA evidence from humans reveals
  the complexities involved in race formation, but because of the many more
  individuals within an insect species race formation can result in the
  formation of exponentially many more over a short period of time. Taxonomic
  separation is so difficult for some groups that only laboratory tests of compatibility
  can determine with certainty if there is reproductive isolation.  The Muscidifurax genus of parasitic
  Hymenoptera is a prime example.  A
  graphic representation of the known relative abundance as of 2010 may be
  viewed in <Ent1>.               History of Entomology. -- The Bible mentions locusts and flies, and
  there are references to insects by the early Egyptians and in Chinese
  writings.  Aristotle in 350 BC. made
  an attempt to classify insects.             In 1758 Linnaeus began the system of binomial
  nomenclature and described seven orders of insects.  Between 1795 and 1819 Peck, a professor of Biology at Harvard
  University, stimulated the development of Economic Entomology.  In 1841 Harris, a student of Peck's,
  produced the first book on Economic Entomology.  This was the first case of Tax Funds expended for such a work.        The year 1854 marks the birth of Entomology as a
  profession.  Townend Glover, of the U.
  S. Department of Agriculture and Asa Fitch an employee of the State of New
  York were hired as entomologists.             From 1867 to 1890 there was a rapid growth of
  Entomology in the United States.  In
  1807 Michigan State College offered the first course in Entomology and in
  1888 Michigan established the first Agricultural Experiment Station.  By 1950 there were over 4,600 professional
  entomologists in the United States alone.             In the latter 1800's C. V. Riley, Chief Entomologist of
  the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture obtained the Rodolia cardinalis predator from
  Australia to combat the invaded cottony-cushion scale in California.  Then L. O. Howard organized the Bureau of
  Entomology in the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture.  J. H. Comstock, professor at Cornell University, followed these
  by writing textbooks on Entomology.            The year 1942
  marked the beginning of synthetic insecticide development which has persisted
  into the 21st Century.             Fossil Records. -- The first records of insect-like
  invertebrates are found in the rocks of the Devonion period. These take the
  form of fragmentary remains of invertebrates similar to the Entognatha, and there is little
  doubt that wingless insects of this kind were abundant in that period when
  there was a great abundance of vegetation of pterydophytes and other plants
  under very wet conditions. It is probable that thysanuran insects similar our
  contemporary silver fish, Lepisma, lived
  then. 
 
 
 
             Insect Numbers. -- Periodic outbreaks of
  insects occur.  Some familiar ones are
  grasshopper swarms, migrating butterflies, wireworm invasions, mayfly swarms,
  forest tent caterpillar invasions, lake fly swarms and Mormon cricket invasions.
  The abundance of very tiny parasitic species, for example, is almost
  impossible to determine.             The honeybee is an example of extraordinary
  numbers.  In summer a healthy honeybee
  colony contains about 55,000 individuals and produces about 200,000
  individuals per year.              The persistence of insects in the environments may be
  realized when considering that no single species has ever been deliberately
  eradicated.             Insect Distribution. -- Insects are found almost
  everywhere except in the sea where they may occur in rare exceptions.  Insects also parasitize most other animals
  (e.g., even sea lions have lice).             Useful Attributes of Insects. --
  Insects do twice as much good as harm. 
  They pollinate plants, serve as natural predators and parasites of
  noxious insects, are scavengers and produce useful products such as honey,
  wax, silk and shellac.  Their great
  fecundity and rapid development continue to make them valuable for studies in
  animal behavior and genetics.             Insects also are valuable scavengers and soil insects
  improve soil texture.  Many insects
  destroy weeds.  They are important food
  sources for fish, birds and mammals and in some parts of the world for
  humans.              The aesthetic value of insects for collections, designs
  and in zoological parks cannot be ignored.             Harmful Aspects of
  Insects. -- There are more than 11,000 pest species of insects in the
  world.  They can cause over 12 percent
  loss to agronomic crops and they are capable of infesting almost every crop
  grown.  Their high reproductive
  potential makes them especially important as pests.  Such groups as mosquitoes, tsetse flies, wasps, etc., not only
  cause great annoyance but some are able to transmit serious pathogens to
  humans and other animals or they may kill directly.  Some species have figured prominently as carriers of typhoid,
  dysentary and malaria.             Economic Significance. -- The Petrochemical
  Industry has figured actively in the control of pest insects.  It costs about 1.8 million U.S. dollars to
  marked an insecticide.  Entomology is
  also a fascinating science due to the diversity of forms, habitats, response
  to stimuli, endurance, etc.  There
  continues to be a great demand for entomologists in the control of insect
  pests. | 
                                                            Orders of Insects                                       (Also see entorder.htm)
 
                                                            Future taxonomic changes will require agreement among specialists.
 
| Subphylum: 
  Hexapoda     Class:  Entognatha -- Diplura, Protura, Collembola  Class:  Insecta – Insects      ----------------------         
  Thysanura -- Bristletails     
  Ephemeroptera -- Mayflies     
  Odonata -- Dragonflies, Damselflies      Orthoptera -- Locusts, Grasshoppers, Crickets,          
  Cockroaches, Walking sticks, Mantids      Dermaptera -- Earwigs      Isoptera -- Termites, White ants      Embioptera -- Webspinners      Plecoptera -- Stone flies      Zoraptera -- Zorapterans      Psocoptera -- Psocids      Mallophaga -- Chewing lice |        Phthiraptera (= Anoplura)-- Sucking lice     
  Thysanoptera -- Thrips      Hemiptera -- Plant bugs, Stink bugs, Chinch                             bugs, Ambush bugs, Water                             striders, Toad bugs      Homoptera -- Cicadas, Psyllids, Aphids, Scales       Neuroptera -- Alderflies, Snakeflies, Lacewings,                              Antlions      Coleoptera -- Beetles      Strepsiptera -- Twisted-winged parasites      Mecoptera -- Scorpion flies      Trichoptera -- Caddis flies      Lepidoptera -- Butterflies, Moths      Diptera -- Flies      Siphonaptera -- Fleas       Hymenoptera -- Bees, Wasps, Ants | 
 
| External Morphology of Insects   [For greater detail see <Morphology>]            The insect's body is composed of metameres.  This is a series of metameres that
  together comprises the exoskeleton.             Exoskeleton
  Function. -- The exoskeleton gives
  the body form and shape.  It contains the
  body fluids and affords protection from desiccation and predators.  It consists of chitin arranged in plates
  called sclerites joined by a membrane.             Body Regions. -- Every region of the
  insect has been designated for specific functions.  The head is a composite of five metameres and serves for
  sensory reception and food ingestion. 
  The thorax is a composite of three metameres and serves for
  locomotion.  The abdomen is a
  composite of ten or more metameres.             Function
  of The Body Regions. -- The head is sensory and serves for the ingestion of
  food.  The thorax contains structural
  parts that are used for locomotion. 
  The abdomen houses the visceral structures.  A large portion is involved in respiration, and all of the
  excretion and reproduction activities are confined there.             Division of a Metamere. -- The following diagram
  <ent2> shows the various divisions:                The various plates are called sclerites.  Between the sclerites there exit
  membranous invaginations, which permit articulation of one plate on
  another.  The exoskeleton stretches
  like cellophane, which retains its stretched shape (unlike rubber).             The termite queen has on her body brown specks that are
  the remnants of dorsal sclerites (= tergites).  Her abdomen will never resume its original
  smaller size.               Metameres telescope one upon the other:               The legs attach
  to the body by membranes:               A suture is any point on an insect's
  body where there is an invagination.             Subdivisions of Thoracic
  Metamere.--
  The following diagram shows the possible subdivisions of a thoracic metamere.     -----------------------------------------------------               Gross Morphology. -- The hypodermis
  secretes the exoskeleton.  The epicuticle is a waxy, water repellent substance.  The exocuticle is
  hard and heavily pigmented.  The endocuticle is soft and not as deeply pigmented.               Chemical Composition. -- Chitin
  is a soft, pliable and not pigmented nitrogenous polysaccharide.  Polymerized proteins may become
  impregnated  into the chitin making it
  hard (= sclerotin). 
  Various degrees of sclerotization exist.  KOH dissolves out the pigments and is useful in clearing
  specimens in preparation for laboratory examination.             Apodemes. -- These are
  invaginations of the body wall.  They
  serve to brace various parts of the body. 
  They are called a tentorium in the head.               Sense Perception. -- The integument also
  is sensitive to touch (tactile), chemical (smell) and sound (hearing).             Outgrowths of The Body Wall. -- Outgrowths without any
  modifications beneath are spines.               Setae. -- Setae have a sensory cell
  associated with them called a trichogen.               Poison glands may occur where the seta is hollow and
  associated with glands.  Urticating hairs of poisoneous caterpillars are
  examples.             Setae are also
  used as a method of classification: 
  their pattern is constant per species.             Johnston's Organ located on the second antennal
  segment may function in sound perception.               The position of the head is variable and may be
  projected forward (hypognathous), downward (prognathous) or backward (opistognathous).               Compound Eyes. -- These vary in size in
  different insects.  They consist of ommatidia, which are hexagonal pieces placed
  together.  The numbers of ommatidia in
  a compound eye varies and may vary from several hundred to 28,000 in a
  dragonfly.  The insect's vision is a
  mosaic pattern, which is very efficient for detecting motion.               Ocelli. -- There are usually three ocelli but some
  species may have only one, each of which consists of a single lens.  Ocelli detect motion and changes in light
  intensity.             Other
  Regions. --
  Various other portions of the head are the Vertex, Gena, Tentorial Pits and Frons (see diagram <Ent11>).               Antennae. -- There is one pair of
  antennae, and the various types that are found in insects may be viewed in
  the following diagram (Ent13):                 The mandibles, maxillae and labrum may be remnants of
  appendages.  There is also a clypeus,
  labium and hypopharynx.  These are discussed
  as follows:  The mouthparts are
  important in insect classification.             The Labrum holds food in the mouth.             Mandibles
  are
  tooth-like structures that articulate with the head, and there are two of
  them.  Large muscles are attached to
  them and they hare modified to perform many tasks.  They are also segmented but this is usually not obvious.  Maxillae consist of several parts
  as shown in Figure Ent14.  They push food into the mouth.               The Hypopharynx
  is a
  single bulbous tongue-like salivary gland that is attached to the roof of the
  mouth.  It is highly sensory.             The Labium is believed to be a fusion
  of two primitive structures (Fig. Ent16).  It consists of palpi, which function as a
  food pushing structure and also holds food in the mouth.               Occiput. -- This is the side of
  the head as shown in Figure Ent15:                   The Chewing
  type is the basic primitive
  kind found in the grasshopper.             The Cutting-sponging type is
  found in the horsefly and deerfly. 
  The mandibles are long and lance-like for cutting or stabbing.  The maxillae are long and slender and help
  the mandibles.  The labium is
  sponge-like, while the hypopharyns and epipharynx are a sucking tube.             The Sponging
  type is found in the
  housefly.  The mandibles and maxillae
  have disappeared.  The fly sponges up
  with the labium and sucks up with a tube.             The Chewing-lapping type is
  found in the honeybee.  The mandibles
  and labrum are like that in the Chewing type, but the bee uses them for wax
  molding.  The maxillae and labium have
  combined to form a tube-like structure for lapping and sucking.             Sucking
  Mouthparts -- These are specially
  modified mouthparts found in Diptera, Hymenoptera and Homoptera.  They are homologized with chewing
  mouthparts and are located underneath the clypeus (Fig.
  Ent17)               Piercing-sucking mouthparts are found in the
  mosquito, leafhoppers and fleas.  The
  hypopharynx and epipharynx are extended into stylets of which there are four
  or six.  The labium forms a protective
  sheath around the stylets.  Stylets
  form two tubes.  Saliva goes down one
  tube and food up the other.             Siphoning mouthparts
  are
  found in butterflies and moths.  The
  maxillae are the only part remaining and have fused into a long tube.  Only liquids are fed upon.   -------------------------------------------               The thorax is composed of three
  metameres:  (1) Prothorax,
  (2) Mesothorax and (3) Metathorax.  The pleural regions of these are
  associated with well-developed legs and wings.  There are usually no spiracles on the prothorax, and wings may
  occur only on the meso and metathorax. 
  A pronotum is formed as an extension of the
  prothorax, which gives strength.  A sulcus or invaginated line is present that aids in wing
  movement.  Coxal sclerites are located
  in a membrane around the coxa that assists in moving the leg.  The spiracles are
  complex structures, the opening and closing of which may be controlled by the
  insect.               The Insect Leg. -- There are five parts
  to the insect leg:  the coxa,
  trochanter, femur, tibia, and tarsus. 
  The tibia may bear sharp, fixed spines.  There may also be a movable spine or spur located at the distal
  end, which can articulate.  On the
  distal of the tarsus there is a pair of claws.  There is also a median pad-like structure
  called the empodium and lateral pad-like structures
  called pulvillae.                The Insect Wings. -- Insects are the only
  invertebrates with wings and wings are important in insect
  classification.  They are added to the
  body and not derived from modified appendages as in the bird or bat.  They are possibly expansions of the body
  wall that were originally used as gliding structures.  The pleural regions are formed out of the
  necessity for lateral bracing. 
  Movements of the body wall caused by muscle contraction move the
  wing.  Longitudinal muscles are
  strongest on the down stroke.  The
  insect must also tilt its wings and they rotate on the pleural sulcus.             In many insects the wings are formed as pads externally
  (e.g., grasshopper).  In other insects
  they are internally formed (e.g., caterpillar).  Branches of the tracheal trunks lead into the pads.  In the latter stages of development a sac
  collapses, cells slough away leaving two sheets of cuticula.  The veins are more concentrated and more
  heavily sclerotized at the leading edge of the wing.             Wing Morphology. -- There is much
  variation in forms.  Wings developed
  late in insect evolution.  Pleural
  sclerites are not developed in primitive forms (e.g., Thysanura).  In some highly evolved parasitic orders
  the wings are wanting.  Structures in
  the thorax reveal that they were primitively winged (e.g., fleas) as pleural
  sclerites are present.             There are usually two pairs of wings, but Diptera have
  one pair with remnants of a second pair, called halteres.  There appears to be a trend toward the
  development of one metamere, the mesothorax, for flight.  Wings are borne only on the meso and
  metathorax but never on the prothorax.             Some insects, like beetles, have their forewings
  modified as covers.  Many wings have
  scales or hairs.  Scales are arranged
  as shingles on a roof.  A scale is a
  modified seta as is also a hair.             The generalized insect wing and its venation may be
  viewed at Ent20.               Venation varies with different
  forms.  In the long and narrow wing
  the vanal veins are absent.  In the
  wide wing the great width is due to expansion of the vanal region.             Sometimes many
  veins will coalesce together and many will completely disappear.  Coalescences may be determined by close
  examination.  Where R-4 and R-5 have
  come together the code given is R4+5.             Crossveins are designted by lower
  case letters as follows:  humeral (h),
  radial (r), sectorial (s), radial-medial (r-m), medial-cubital (m-cu).             Cells in the
  wings may be either closed or open.             There may be
  some modified structures on the wings. 
  Wing Uniting Mechanisms are often
  present.  A stiff spine at the base of
  the hind wing is called a frenulum.  In moths a single spine is characteristic
  of the male and a cluster of spines of the female.  Hamuli are found in bees. [See Ent21]     -------------------------------------------               The abdomen consists of relatively
  simple metameres:  a tergum plus a
  sternum.  There are typically 10
  metameres and a maximum of 12.             Spiracles. -- In the primitive
  insect every metamere had an opening into the respiratory system.  Presently there is a maximum of 8 pairs of
  spiracles on the first eight metameres.             Spiracles may be of various shapes.  Some are a simple opening, some are
  recessed and some are fringed with setae. 
  The setae may be covered with fatty substances that inhibit water
  passage.             There may be any one of several opening and closing
  mechanisms.  There is the stationary
  ridge plus a movable ridge.  The can be
  two movable ridges.  There are also
  the pinch cock and rod meshwork mechanisms.             Abdominal
  Appendages.
  -- In the primitive insect every metamere had a pair of appendages.  There are no locomotory appendages on the
  abdomen of modern insects, but remnants do exist.  For example, the Thysanura (silverfish) bears styli,
  which are vestigial legs.  Cerci are also caudal appendages on the 10th or 11th
  metameres.  In the cerci of the
  silverfish there can be 90 or more segments. 
  In the grasshopper the cerci are very tiny.  Cerci may serve as tactile structures.             Reproductive
  Structures.
  -- A genital opening, or gonopore, always occurs on
  metamere #8 in the female and metamere #9 in the male.             Modifications for inserting eggs exist.  There is the simple conveyor tube, or a
  cutting device that functions similar to a can opener, and a tamping
  mechanism.             In some insects the entire abdomen may be modified for
  oviposition.  A telecoping effect may
  be present as in the housefly.             In the male there may be claspers,
  which serve as good taxonomic characters (See Ent22).     -------------------------------------------   Details of Insect Taxonomic Groups             Examples of beneficial species occur in almost every
  insect order, and considerable information on morphology and habits has been
  assembled.  Therefore, the principal
  groups of insect parasitoids and predators provide details that refer to the
  entire class Insecta.  These details
  are available at <taxnames.htm>.   =============   |