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Plecoptera, Blattodea & Isoptera (EE, pp. 84-104) Phylogeny of Hexapoda (from p. 52) Plecoptera, Blattodea & Isoptera Division III: Neoptera Primitively wingless insects Winged insects Subdivision: Exopterygota (Hemimetabola) • • • • young stages are called “nymphs” nymphs typically eat the same food as the adult stage wings develop outside of the body (exopterygota) metamorphosis is simple (hemimetabolous) Subdivision: Endopterygota (Holometabola) • • • young stages are called “larvae” (singular = larva) wings develop internally (endopterygota) metamorphosis is complete (holometabolous) The transition from hemi- to holometabolous transition from larva to adult takes place during a pupal stage Plecoptera stoneflies • • • • plectos – pleated; pteron – wing body 3 – 48 mm wingspan up to 100 mm incomplete metamorphosis – hemimetabolous (egg, nymph, adult) • worldwide but mainly cool temperate • 15 families; 2000 spp. (0.2 %) • • • • • • aquatic nymphs (naiads) cold, fast flowing streams with stone or gravel some have gills mostly herbivorous (some omnivorous or predatory) 1 – 4 years before becoming adults important in aquatic food chains • • • • • • weak fliers, usually remain near water adults rest with wings against body weakly developed mouthparts; little or no feeding males and females call each other via vibration eggs laid in the water important in aquatic food chains • Sensitive to pollution • Require high oxygen content • Presence may indicate high water quality Blattodea cockroaches • • • • • • blatta – cockroach body 3 – 100 mm incomplete metamorphosis worldwide distribution 6 families 4000 spp. (0.4 %) • • • • • flattened, broadly oval and leathery-bodied tegmina – front wings toughened covers membranous hind wings many are fast running eggs often laid in a toughened case • • • • most are scavengers or omnivores some cannibalism or predation some eat wood cockroaches can’t digest cellulose - symbiotic protozoans do it for them • at each molt, juveniles must reingest protozoans chemicals - female pheromones - male dorsal abdominal glands auditory - stridulation - hissing ootheca Oviparous – young hatch from eggs outside of female Ovoviviparous – young hatch from eggs inside female body Viviparous – young receive nutrients from female while inside of her • • • • a few species are pests live closely with humans can transport bacteria and viruses cockroach allergens and asthma Control: • • • • cleanliness insecticides resistance can develop best approach is integrated pest management (IPM) - hymenopteran parasitoids - fungal pathogens Isoptera termites • • • • • • • • isos – equal pteron – wing only reproductives have wings body 3 – 20 mm queens can be up to 100 mm incomplete metamorphosis hemimetabolous worldwide but not more than 50 degrees N or S 7 families; 2500 spp. (0.25 %) Caste – morphologically or behaviorally specialized individuals queen – 1 male reproductive – few worker:soldier – 50:1 • • • • • soft-bodied social insect with castes mainly tropical and subtropical destructive to wood and plant material workers seldom forage or are exposed – mostly in nests or runways 25 600,000 US homes per year $1.5 Billion in damages caste determination = genetics + environment Burj Khalifa building (Dubai, United Arab Emirates) • temperature regulation • air circulation • feed on wood – symbiotic protozoans to digest cellulose (like cockroaches – fungus gardens • nitrogen fixing gut bacteria • trophallaxis – exchange of food between colony members – pass on symbionts to young and newly molted Soldier types hitting biting spraying exploding abdomen Ecosystem benefits • nutrient cycling – decomposition of wood • aerate soil • food items for many species