Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Bugs, aphids & hoppers, oh my! (EE, pp. 153-166) Phylogeny of Hexapoda (from p. 52) Hemiptera Hemiptera Common name: Bugs, aphids, hoppers, etc. (82,000 known world species (8.2%)) Derivation: Gk. hemi - half; pteron - a wing Size: Body length 1-100 mm; mostly under 50 mm Metamorphosis: Incomplete (egg, nymph, adult) Distribution: Worldwide Number of families: 134 Key Features • • very abundant and widespread • stink glands and sound producing organs sometimes present • many species are significant plant pests and some transmit human and animal diseases • the fifth largest order mouthparts forming a piercing/sucking beak or rostrum for liquid feeding They are everywhere! (terrestrial habitats, fresh water and even out to sea) • the largest and most successful of the exopterygote orders • recent estimates suggest more than 105,000 species of bugs are not described - based on work in the tropical rain forests of Indonesia Halobates - often found hundreds of miles from land Suborders of Hemiptera (used to be split into two large groups - Heteroptera and Homoptera) Suborder Number of families Feeding habits Coleorrhyncha 1 (Peloridiidae) Herbivorous on mosses and liverworts Heteroptera 73 Herbivorous, predacious, parasitic Auchenorrhyncha 31 Herbivorous Sternorrhyncha 29 Herbivorous Suborder Sternorrhyncha (the basal hemipteran suborder - all herbivorous) potato/tomato psyllid silverleaf whiteflies pea aphid scale insect Suborder Auchenorrhyncha (all herbivorous) treehopper froghopper leafhopper planthopper some cool planthoppers - lantern bugs Suborder Coleorrhyncha (contains a single family - found only in the southern hemisphere) • • small, flattened and cryptically colored - live in saturated moss at the base of Nothofagus trees Likely originated in Antarctica and were in existence prior to the break-up of Gondwana (supercontinent that included the landmasses in today’s southern hemisphere) planthopper Suborder Heteroptera (the true bugs - includes herbivorous and predacious members) water boatman (corixid) tarnished plant bug (mirid) bed bug (cimicid) Suborder Heteroptera (this is the largest suborder - it is very diverse) water strider (gerrid) giant water bug (belostomatid) stink bug (pentatomid) shield bug leaf or plant bug (mirid) stilt bug (berytid) hammerhead bug (geocorid) lace bug (tingid) The perfect suckers (all bugs possess piercing, sucking mouthparts that form a rostrum (long beak)) Heteroptera Sternorrhyncha In Sternorrhyncha (iii) and Auchenorryhncha (ii) the rostrum is permanently directed backwards Auchenorryhncha uchenorryhncha How the rostrum works (the bug rostrum is similar throughout the order) How to feed on plants (how does a bug reach phloem or xylem?) • stylets work through plant cells • stylets protected by a salivary sheath Filter chambers (some sap suckers have a modified gut - deals with excessive fluids) two-linned spittlebug (cercopid) Feeding on low quality food (some bugs rely on microorganisms to provide essential nutrients) • generally bacteria contained within special bodies in the haemoceol or inside lumen of the midgut • in aphids, bacteria in specialized cells called mycetocytes • provide nitrogen, vitamins and some lipids Fig. 1. (Left) Pea aphids on a broad bean seedling. (Right) In the aphid body, symbiotic bacteria with important biological roles are harbored in specialized cells. Buchnera (green) is essential for survival and reproduction of the host aphid. Serratia (red) confers a resistance to high temperature on the host aphid, and can compensate for the essential biological roles of Buchnera. Blue shows aphid’s nuclei. Predatory bugs (some are active hunters, others ambush their prey) Practicing defense (many heteropterans produce noxious or repellant organic compounds) Practicing defense (many heteropterans advertise their defenses using bright colors) Bugs and ants (many bugs have evolved mutualistic relationships with ants) Sociality in bugs (usually only think of the Hymenoptera and Isoptera as being social) • first instar nymphs of some aphid species serve as colony defenders • attack invaders with specialized horns or with their mouthparts • soldiers usually don’t live past the first instar Reproduction in bugs (most bugs reproduce bisexually, but some are hermaphrodites) • around 10% of aphid species have complex life cycles involving sexual and asexual forms • involves alternations of generations between two unrelated host plants (one woody and one herbaceous) Finding mates (males can sing, some talk through mechanical vibrations) Periodic cicadas (time from hatching to adult emergence is either 13 or 17 years) Bloomington, IN (2004) Paternal care (males sometimes protect or even carry the eggs) Bugs as human pests (some bugs feed on blood and are vectors of human disease) • bed bugs have a long history of association with people • feed at night, hide in bedding, mattresses or cracks in floors and walls during day • hosts located by body temperature, odors and CO2 kissing bugs are a vector for Chagas disease - 18 million people affected (causes death in children) Bugs as human pests (some auchenorrhynchan and sternorrhynchan are crop pests) soybean aphid causes “sticky cotton” bugs are often vectors for many plant diseases