*INSECT TAXONOMY DIVERSITY*
By : Mo’Esha Jackson
*INSECT ORDERS* Emhemeroptera
Odonata Blattaria Isoptera Dermatpera Orthoptera Phasmida Hemiptera Coleoptera
Lepidoptera Diptera Siphonoptera Hymenoptera Mantodea Plecoptera
• EPHEMEROPTERA Ephemeroptera comes from the
Greek ephemeros meaning lasting a day and pteron meaning wing. the adults exhibit an erratic up and down flight pattern over water or nearby rocks and bushes, mate in flight, lay eggs on the surface of a water body and die, usually within a day but ranging from a few minutes to several days. The adults have no functioning mouthparts with which to feed, their only purpose is reproduction and dispersal.
• ODONATA Odonata is divided into two
suborders, Zygoptera (damselflies) and Epiprocta (dragonflies), both have aquatic juvenile stages. As exopterygote insects (incomplete metamorphosis), there can be confusion as to whether juvenile dragonflies should be called nymphs or larvae. Tillyard (1917) decided that by definition larval structure differs significantly from adult form and therefore dragonflies are larvae because they do not exhibit the elongated abdomen that damselflies do.
• BLATTARIA
The oriental cockroach, also known as the waterbug, is a large species of cockroach
adult males being 18–29 mm and adult females being 20–27 mm.
Scientific name: Blatta orientalis
Biological classification: Species
• ISOPTERA1.Scientific name: Termitoidae2.Consists of: Termopsidae · Mastotermes darwiniensis · Kalotermitidae · Hodotermitidae · Rhinotermitidae · Termitidae · Serritermitidae3. Belongs to: Cockroach4.Termites are a group of eusocial insects that, until recently, were classified at the taxonomic rank of order Isoptera
• DERMATPTERA Earwigs make up the insect
order Dermaptera and are found throughout the Americas, Africa, Eurasia, Australia and New Zealand. With about 2,000 species in 12 families, they are one of the smaller insect orders
Scientific name: Dermaptera Higher classification:
Exopterygota Rank: Order
• ORTHOPTERA
Orthoptera is an order of insects with paurometabolous or incomplete metamorphosis, including the grasshoppers, crickets, cave crickets, Jerusalem crickets, katydids, weta, lubber, Acrida, and locusts.
Scientific name: Orthoptera Rank: Order Higher classification: Exopterygota Lower classifications: Ensifera, Grasshopper
• PHASMIDA1.The Phasmatodea are an order of insects, whose members are variously known as stick insects, walking sticks or stick-bugs, phasmids, ghost insects and leaf insects2.Scientific name: Phasmatodea3.Higher classification: Exopterygota4.Rank: Order5.Lower classifications: Diapheromeridae, Pseudophasmatidae, Phasmatidae
• HEMIPTERA1.Hemiptera is an order of insects most often known as the true bugs, comprising around 50,000–80,000 species of cicadas, aphids, planthoppers, leafhoppers, shield bugs, and others. 2.Scientific name: Hemiptera3.Rank: Order4.Higher classification: Exopterygota5.Lower classifications: Peloridiidae, Auchenorrhyncha, Sternorrhyncha, Heteroptera
• COLEOPTERA
Coleoptera (beetles and weevils) is the largest order in the class Insecta. The Coleoptera order of insects is commonly called beetles. beetles are regarded as major pests of agricultural plants and stored products
• LEPIDOPTERA Lepidoptera is a large order
of insects that includes moths and butterflies. It is one of the most widespread and widely recognizable insect orders in the world, encompassing moths and the three. It is one of the most widespread and widely recognizable insect orders in the world,[1] encompassing moths and the three superfamilies of butterflies, skipper butterflies, and moth-butterflies.
• DIPTERA The order Diptera
includes all true flies. These insects are distinctive because their hind wings are reduced to small, club-shaped structures called halteres - only the membranous front wings serve as aerodynamic surfaces. The halteres vibrate during flight and work much like a gyroscope to help the insect maintain balance.
• SIPHONOPTERA Fleas are the insects forming the
order Siphonaptera. They are wingless, with mouthparts adapted for piercing skin and sucking blood.
• Adults : Body bilaterally flattened• Mouthparts suctorial (haustellate)• Large bristles (ctenidia) often
present on head or thorax (genal and pronotal combs)
• Hind femur enlarged, adapted for jumping
• Immatures: Body vermiform (maggot-like), sparsely covered with hairs
• Head reduced, eyeless, mouthparts mandibulate
• HYMENOPTERA• Immatures: Sawflies: Eruciform
(caterpillar-like); well developed head capsule; chewing mouthparts; fleshy abdominal prolegs
• Bees and wasps: Grub-like; well developed head; chewing mouthparts; legless and eyeless
• Parasitic wasps: Body form highly reduced; lacking head, eyes or appendages
• Adults: Chewing mouthparts - except in bees where maxillae and labium form a proboscis for collecting nectar.
• Compound eyes well developed.• Tarsi usually 5-segmented.
• MANTODEA• Adults:• Filiform antennae• Head triangular with well-developed
compound eyes• Mouthparts mandibulate, hypognathous• Prothorax elongate with large, spiny front
legs adapted for catching prey• Front wings thickened, more slender than
hind wings• Tarsi 5-segmented• Cerci short, multi-segmented• Immatures:• Structurally similar to adults• Developing wingpads often visible on thorax
• PLECOPTERA
• Immatures• Antennae long, filiform• Body flattened, legs widely separated• Tracheal gills present as "tufts" behind the head,
at base of legs, or around the anus• Each segment of thorax is covered by a large
dorsal sclerite• Cerci long, multi-segmented• Adults• Antennae long, filiform• Front wings long and narrow; M-Cu crossveins
form distinctive boxes near center of front wing• Hind wings shorter than front wings; basal area of
hind wing enlarged and pleated• Cerci long, multi-segmented
THE END !!!