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The Hexapods and Myriapods: Terrestrial Triumphs Chapter 15 Zoology The Insects • 750,000 + species insects described, but may be 30 million species undescribed. • Many adaptations make insects one of the most successful terrestrial animals. – Exoskeleton for water conservation – Tracheal System for gas exchange – Metamorphosis – Many types of mouth parts – Flight Subphylum Myriapoda • Myriad, ten thousand + podus, foot; millipedes and centipedes. • Two tagmata (head and trunk) • All are terrestrial Class Diplopoda – The Millipedes • Have 11 – 100 trunk segments, each with two pairs of appendages. • Each segment is actually the fusion of two segments; internally there are two ganglia, two pairs of ostia, etc. in each segment. • Most are round. • Feed on decaying plant matter. • Roll into a ball for defense. • Some excrete hydrogen cyanide as a deterrent to predators. Giant African Millipede See it move! Class Chilopoda – The Centipedes • 15+ trunk segments, each with a pair of legs. • Flattened body • Last pair of legs is modified into long sensory appendages. • Nocturnal predators • Poison claws (maxillipeds) on first segment capture other invertebrates and small vertebrates. • Males lay down a silk web and places a spermatophore for female. Predatory Centipede vs. Mouse Subphylum Hexapoda • Class Insecta – three tagmata (head, thorax, and abdomen) – Five pair of head appendages – Three pairs of legs on thorax Specialized Mouthparts • Modified mouthparts have allowed insects to diversify and take advantage of many different food sources. • Modify generic structures for various food sources. Generalized Insect Mouthparts Chewing Mouthparts Piercing Mouthparts Siphoning Mouthparts Sponging Mouthparts Antennae Modifications Insect Flight • Direct or Synchronous Flight – muscles attach at the base of wings contract for downward thrust and muscles attach to the exoskeleton contract for upward thrust. Requires two nerve impulses for upward and downward strokes. Ex. Butterflies, dragonflies, grasshoppers. • Indirect or Asynchronous Flight – muscles act to change the shape of the exoskeleton for both strokes. Only one nerve impulse for 50 cycles. Ex. Flies and wasps. Indirect Insect Flight • Indirect flight muscles allow wings to beat faster than neural transmission. • Dorsoventral and longitudinal muscles. • Flexible thorax. Review of Insect Physiology • • • • Digestion – three part tract. Respiration – most use a tracheal system Circulation – open circulatory system Nervous – ventral nerve cord with some segmental ganglion. • Excretion – Malpighian tubules with uric acid. Tracheal Systems in Insects • The tracheal system of insects – Consists of tiny branching tubes that penetrate the body Air sacs Tracheae Spiracle (a) The respiratory system of an insect consists of branched internal tubes that deliver air directly to body cells. Rings of chitin reinforce the largest tubes, called tracheae, keeping them from collapsing. Enlarged portions of tracheae form air sacs near organs that require a large supply of oxygen. Air enters the tracheae through openings called spiracles on the insect’s body surface and passes into smaller tubes called tracheoles. The tracheoles are closed and contain fluid (blue-gray). When the animal is active and is using more O2, most of the fluid is withdrawn into the body. This increases the surface area of air in contact with cells. • The tracheal tubes – Supply O2 directly to body cells. Body cell Tracheole Air sac Trachea Tracheoles (b) This micrograph shows cross sections of tracheoles in a tiny piece of insect flight muscle (TEM). Each of the numerous mitochondria in the muscle cells lies within about 5 µm of a tracheole. Body wall Air Mitochondria Myofibrils 2.5 µm Tracheal System Limits Size See the Giant Weta Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Insect Excretion 3 Kinds of Insect Metamorphosis • Ametabolous Metamorphosis – only difference between larvae and adult are size; both are wingless. Silverfish, Order Thysanura. After Flight… • Hemimetabolous Metamorphosis – develop from egg to adult has several stages (instars) with smaller versions of adults called nymphs. Immature nymphs have no wings or genitalia until adult. 3 Kinds of Insect Metamorphosis • Holometabolous Metamorphosis – after hatching from egg, immatures are called larvae (very different body form than adult). After several instars, the last larval molt forms a pupa – undergoes radical body form change. – Protective case may enclose pupal stage: • Moths use silk to make a cocoon. • Butterflies use the larval exoskeleton to make a chrysalis. • Adult emerges from case very different in body form – eclosion. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Incomplete or Hemimetabolous Metamorphosis From Hickman/Roberts/Larson, Integrated Principles of Zoology, 11th ed., Copyright © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Complete or Holometabolous Metamorphosis From Raven/Johnson, Biology, 3rd ed., Copyright © 1999 The McGraw-Hill Companies. You Decide? Hemimetabolous - insects hatch looking much like adults. Nymphs gradually attain adult form and wings. Holometabolous - young very different from adults. Pupal stage metamorhosis into adult. Insect Orders Order Collembela • Antennae with 4-6 segements • No compound eyes • Six segments in abdomen • Furcula for jumping • No wings • Springtails Order Thysanura • Tapering abdomen • Long antennae, scaled on body • No wings • Silverfish Order Odonota • Elongate, membraneous wings. • Long, slender abdomen • Large compound eyes • Dragonflies,damselflies Order Mantodea • Long prothorax • Legs armed with spine for grasping prey • Mantids Missouri Native –Chinese mantis, Tenodera aridifolia Blattaria • Oval, flattened body • Head concealed by an extension of prothorax • Cockroaches Order Orthoptera • Long, narrow forewing • Hindwing is broader • Chewing mouthparts • Grasshopper Order Dermaptera • Elongate, chewing pouthparts • Abdomen with unsegmented forcepslike cerci • Short wings • Earwigs Order Isoptera • Workers are white and wingless • Abdomen broadly joins thorax • Reproductive forms with wings • Termites Order Hemiptera • Piercing-sucking mouthparts • Wings membraneous – Basal portion is leathery – Apical portion of wing is membranous • Cicadas, leafhoppers, aphids Order Coleoptera • Hard front wings meet midline to form a cover (elytra) • Hindwings membranous • Chewing mouthparts • Beetles, largest insect order; 350,000+ species Order Lepidoptera • Wings are broad and covered in scales • Mouthparts form a sucking tube • Butterflies and moths Order Diptera • One pair of welldeveloped wings, other pair reduced to knoblike halteres • Mouthparts variously modified, but never chewing. • Flies Order Hymenoptera • Four membranous wings • Well-developed ovipositor,sometimes modified into a sting • Mouthparts for biting and lapping. • Social and solitary forms • Bees, wasps, ants Order Phthiraptera • Small, wingless, ectoparasites • Dorsoventrally flattened • Sucking/chewing mouth parts • Lice Order Siphonaptera • Flattened laterally • Sucking mouthparts, ectoparasites • Jumping legs • Fleas The End What order am I?