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Insects - Biodiversity

What are arthropods

These are the insects in the anthropod group and were the last group to break off from the common anscetor due to having 6 thoriac legs

What are hexapoda

The insects fall under the hexapoda group
They have a mouthpart that has mandibles

There are 3 pairs of legs so 6 overall

The body consist of 3 tagmate, the head, thorax anf the abdomen

The appendages are uriamous so are single branched

They have compound eyes and have a tracheal system for gas exchange

What are the 2 classes of hexapoda

There are Entognatha that have retractable mouthpart, are blind or compound eyes and are wingless
Insecta are the most abundant species on earth

Why are insects so diverse on earth

There are 30-80 million species so half the globes species diversity
They are small sized so have more niches in a given environment

They have highly organsied sensory and motor neurone system

There is a short generatio time so faster evolutionary change

They have coevolutionary environment with plants and pollinators

Larvae undego metamorphosis to form winged adults

How do insects undergo gas exchange

Undergo gas exchange by respiration through trachea in their exoskeleton
This means their is a limit on body sieze and o2 transport is less efficient as body size increases and body movement force the CO2 out the body

There are branched airways in the trachea and branch to spiracles and trachioles

This has allowed insects to colonise the land

Why are insect ecologically important

They recycle nutrients and break down dead material
They are plant pollinators and disperse the seeds

Maintain plant community composition by grazing

They are food for other animals and are animal parsites for direct predation of disease vectors

What is endosymbionts

Insects fill many niches in the food web due to a variable diet and digestive system so fill many niche and maintain the water balance

What is the hexapod variable diet

Phloem feeders have to much sugar and water in their diet due to suck from plants phloem
They have malpighian tubes that remove the water and sugar from the phloem, and this is then excreted as honeydew

Desert insects dont have enough water and also have malpighian tubes that are tightly bound to the rectum to extract as much water as possible before excretion

Where did insect wings evolve from

They may have come from lobes on the thorax and or the gills when they conquered the land
There is evidnece for gene expression sites

How do insects fly

Some insects like dragon flies and cockroaches have direct flight muscles where the muscle is directly attached to the wing
Some other in fact most others have indirect muscles, which is where they are attched to the thorax and they are then pivoted to allow them to move the wings

There are 4 types of metamorphosis patterns in insects

Ametoboly - Development to adulthood with little body change excetp sexual maturation and happens in wingless primitive insects
Paurometaboly - Gradual change in body form with external wing bud getting larger at each moult happens in Nymphs and mayflies and dragon flies

Hemimetaboly - Gradual change in body form with external wings buds getting larger at each moult

Holometaboly - Drastic change from wingless larvae to winged adult - happens in most insects

What are the major hexapod groups

Thysanura
Palaeoptera

Odonata

Ephemeroptera

Neoptera

Entognatha

What are the Paleoptera

These cannot flex their wings
Include Mayflies, Dragon flies, Damselflies

They are all hemimetabolous

They can be Voracious aquatic predators so in both in water and in the air

What are Thysanura

These are wingless ametabolous primitive insect such as silverfish

What are coleoptera

These are all the Beetles that make up 40% of all insects
They have modified forewings as rigid elyra that civer the hindwing when resting

They are holometabolous so have a larave,pupal and adult stage

They have opposible mandibles and are heavily sclerotized/armoured

Legs often have claws and adhesive structures

What are Lepidoptera

These are Butterflies and moths and all have a liquid diet due to long proboscis
They have a multisegmentted antennae that is clubbed in butterflies and tappered in moths

Moths are nocturnal unlike butterflies

They are holometabolous due to are catipillars when young when young then develop wings during metamorphosis

They have batesian symmetry so are polymorphic so can mimic unplatable model species

What are Hymenoptera

These are sawflies, Wasps ants and Bees
They have mandible mouthparts for sucking and chewing

They are multisegmented anntenae that are long and helf forward

Wings have simple venation and both are coupled by hooks

3 segmented thorax and have a waist called the petiole abdomen

They are homometabolous so larvae lack legs and mandibles

What are Diptera

These are flies, mosquitoes and midges
They are a mimic of Hymenoptera class

Only 1 pair of wings

What are Hemiptera

These are true bugs that all have sucking mouthpart and needle lile stylets
They are all disease vectors

They are paurometabolis so have immature nymphs when young that resemble the adults

They are divided to 2 groups:

Homoptera and Heteroptera that are different due to wing morhpholgy

What are Orthriptera

These are Locusts, Crickets and Grasshoppers
They are usually winged with fore wings behind leathery tegmina and hind are broad at rest and pleated

They have prootum curved over the Pleura

Hind legs are enlarged for jumping

They are Paurometabolous

They have stridulation so file and scraper to make their noise with it being enhnaced by the tegmina

What are Trichoptera

These are caddisflies that have long multisegmented antennae
They have hairy wings that lack discal cells

They are holometabolous

Live in the pupal state and their presence is used to indicate water quality

How do Hymenoptera sexaully reproduce

Females are diploid and males are haploid so this mena they are more related to sister than offspring

What are 3 true sociality traits

Coorperation of individuals other than parent of caring for the young
Overrlap of 2 generations that can contribute to colony labour

Reproductive division of labour with most of the sterile worker caste working on behalf of individuals that are in reproduction

Honey Bees eusociality

There is resource communication, by waggle dancing for directiion,distance and food quality

Eusociality in Warfare and slavery

Cuckoo wasps lay eggs in another wasp nest where they can eat host eggs and larvae to grow
Cuckok bumblebees invade other bees nest asnd kill the queen and lay eggs in collected pollen

Polyergus ants cant take care of young on their own or even feed them so the workers raid formica ants nest and steal the pupar that then hatch and work for the polygerus colony instead

Eusociality in agriculture

Animal domestication and the anst carry aphids to new pastures and clip the aphids wings when they mature
Ants drink the honeydew

Leafcutter ants bring leaves to their nest so fungus can grow on it and then the ants can eat the fungus

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