Title: Insect Notes: Order Ephemeroptera short lived adults
1Insect NotesOrder Ephemeroptera- (short lived
adults)
- A. soft bodied insects with 2 long threadlike
tails - B. often found around ponds and streams
- C. immature stage is aquatic
- D. incomplete (simple) metamorphosis with a
special non-adult stage called subimago. - E. adults are usually collected in alcohol
2Order Odonata -(tooth as in mandibles)example)
dragonflies and damselflies
- A. They are relatively large and often
beautifully colored insects - B. Immature forms are aquatic- adults are usually
found near water. - C. all stages are predaceous
- D. has 4 wings that are elongated, many veined
and membranous - E. compound eyes
- F. largest dragonfly in this country was about
85mm in length
3Order Odonata -(tooth as in mandibles)example)
dragonflies and damselflies
- G. damselflies fold their wings upward when
resting, and dragonflies do not. - MYTH People once believed that dragonflies were
able to "sew up" a persons lips or ears. This may
be the reason why some dragonflies are called
"darners" a "darner" is also a kind of knitting
needle.
4Order Orthoptera- (straight wings)
- A. includes grasshoppers, crickets,
walkingsticks, mantids, cockroaches - B. most insects in this order are plant feeders,
and they are a pest of cultivated plants. - C. maybe winged (usually four wings or wingless)
- D. many have a long ovipositor
- E. great singers (grasshoppers crickets) by
stridulation (rubbing one body part against
another) - F. some old-timers use them to regulate the
temperature change by the number of chirps. ( of
chirps in 15s add 37 and thats the temperature
in F)
5Order Orthoptera- examples
6Order Isoptera- (equal wings)
- A. includes termites or sometimes called white
ants - B. small to medium size live in colonies and
have highly developed caste system - C. difference between ants and termites-
- Termites are soft-bodied, light color, broadly
joined to the thorax. - Ants are hard-bodied and dark in color
constricted at the base.
7Order Isoptera- (equal wings)
- D. caste system with workers pointed heads,
soldiers-large mandibles, and King and Queen. - E. have flagellated protozoan living in their
digestive tract to break down the wood fibers. - F. harbor bacteria in mutualism
8Order Hemiptera-half wing(These are true bugs!)
- A. includes stink bugs, leaf-footed bugs,
toadbug, assassin bug, wheelbug, bedbug, water
strider, waterboatmen, backswimmer.
9Order Hemiptera-half wing(These are true bugs!)
- B. most distinctive feature structure of the
front wing which is thickened leathery with a
hemelytra called a scutellum. - C. piercing, sucking mouthparts with slender
segmented beak - D. Feed on plant juices, few are predaceous
10Order Homoptera- like wings(closely related to
Hemiptera)
- A. includes cicadas, leaf hoppers, psyllids,
whiteflies, aphids, and scale insects.
11Order Homoptera- like wings(closely related to
Hemiptera)
- B. plant feeders and some species are serious
pests of crops and can transmit plant diseases - C. sucking mouthparts with beaks
- D. winged or wingless
- E. has very small scutellum
12Order Neuroptera- nerve wings
- A. includes alderflies, dobson flies, fishflies,
snakeflies, lacewings, and antlions.
13Order Neuroptera- nerve wings
- B. soft bodied with 4 membranous wings which are
usually held roof like over the body at rest - C. undergoes complete metamorphosis (egg, larva,
pupa, adult) - D. adults are weak fliers
- E. Larva are mostly aquatic except antlions
- F. generally found near water
14Order Coleoptera- sheath wings(Beetles)
- A. the largest order of insects- about 40
- B. found mostly everywhere with many species
being great economic importance - C. most distinctive features are the wing
structures which have 4 wings with the front pair
thickened, leathery or hard brittle usually
meeting in a straight line down the middle of the
back - Scarab beetle
15Order Coleoptera- sheath wings(Beetles)
- D. front wings are called elytra which serves as
protection - E. chewing mouthparts with mandibles, few with a
snout - F. complete metamorphosis
- G. feed on all sorts of plants and animal
materials
16Order Lepidoptera-scale wings
- A. examples are butterflies and moths
- B. recognized by the colorful scales on the wings
- C. large order with 11,000 species found
everywhere - D. economically important to man
- E. plant feeders many are a serious pest on
crops - F. adults are usually colorful
- G. complete metamorphosis with larva
(caterpillar) some with silk glands.
17Order Diptera-flies
- A. includes mosquitoes, black flies, horseflies
- B. possess only 1 pair of wings which is in the
front a haltere- knobbed structure where the
2nd wings should be. - C. relatively small and soft-bodied
- D. very large order, abundant, found almost
everywhere
18Order Diptera-flies
- E. mostly blood-sucking and serious pest of man
animals - F. Mosquitoes can carry West Nile Virus, Yellow
Fever, malaria. Flies can carry,diptheria,
typhoid, cholera, bacillary dysentary. - G. undergoes complete metamorphosis (larva called
maggots) - H. adults feed on various plant and animal juices
19Order Siphonaptera-tube wingless (fleas)
- A. are small wingless jumping insects
- B. blood feeders of birds and mammals
- C. annoying biters and few act as a vector
(plague black death) - D. flattened laterally with numerous backward
spines and bristles - E. eggs usually laid in the dirt or nest of host
with larva spinning a cocoon.
20Order Hymenoptera-(god of marriage referring to
the union of front hind wings)
- A. includes sawflies, ichneumons, ants, wasps,
and bees. - B. usually parasitic predaceous on other
insects, pests, bees being pollinators - C. 4 wings with the hind wing being smaller
- D. complete metamorphosis
- E. larva are grub-like or maggot-like