Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia) Evolved over 300 million years ago Most...

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Transcript of Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia) Evolved over 300 million years ago Most...

Page 1: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)
Page 2: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)

Evolved over 300 million years agoMost successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Page 3: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Diversity (species and variety)Numbers (population size)Success due in part to enormous range of variationStructural (morphological)Physiological (chemical)Behavioral

Page 4: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Characteristics and Classification

Body - 3 parts Head with 1 pair of antennaeThorax with 3 pair of jointed legs and in many species 1-2 pair of wingsAbdomen with 11 segments (lacks wings and legs)

Page 5: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)
Page 6: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)
Page 7: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Success of the

Found virtually everywhere except the deep oceanExtremely short life span -> rapid adaptation to new environmentsSmall size -> greater partitioning of habitats while minimizing competitionFlight -> greater dispersal, escape from predation, and movement into environments less accessible to other species

Page 8: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Insects and Human Society

Positive impactMajor pollinator of flowering plants (2/3 of all plants)Food for fish, birds and mammals (important link in food web)Help recycle materials (termites)Useful biproducts (honey and silk)

Page 9: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Negative impactAgricultural pestsSpread disease

Page 10: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Grasshoppers

3 main body segmentsHead (brain and sense organs)AntennaeCompound and simple eyesComplex moth parts

Page 11: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Thorax (legs and wings attached)Prothorax and mesothorax (each have pair of walking legs)Metathorax (jumping legs

Page 12: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Abdomen (organs of reproduction, digestion, respiration, and excretion)2 pair of wingsLeathery protective forewing (mesothorax)Hind wing which is used for flight (metathorax)

Page 13: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Digestive System

Specialized mouthparts (liplike labium and labrum, jawlike mandibles and maxillae)Salivary glands (produce saliva)Digestive ceca (produces digestive enzymes)

Page 14: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Food -> mouth -> esophagus -> crop (storage) -> gizzard (chitinous plates shred it) -> stomach (mid gut) (mixes with gastric enzymes from ceca and absorbed) -> hind gut (colon and rectum) -> anus

Page 15: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Excretory System

Malpighian tubules in hindgut remove wastes from blood and deposit them in the rectum

Page 16: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Circulatory System

Open circulatory systemBlood -> aorta -> hearts (muscular region of aorta in posterior abdomen) -> anterior coelom (head) -> abdomen (absorbs and disperses nutrients) -> aorta via ostia

Page 17: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Respiratory System

Air -> spiracles (opening in thorax and abdomen) -> tracheae (network of air tubes) -> body tissuesContraction of abdomen reverses process

Page 18: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Nervous System

Simple brainVentral nerve cord3 simple eyes (detect light)2 compound eyes (composed of hexagonal lenses capable of detecting movement but not sharp images)

Page 19: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Tympanum (detects sounds; located on first abdominal segment)Antennae (detects touch and smell)

Page 20: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Reproductive System

Sperm deposited into female's seminal receptacle (stored until eggs are released)Eggs fertilized internallyOvipositor (pair of pointed organs at tip of abdomen) used to dig a hole in soil and deposit eggs

Page 21: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Development

Metamorphosis - developmental changes -> distinct changes in form and sizeIncomplete Metamorphosis3 stages (egg, nymph, and adult)Nymph- smaller immature form; similar to adult but underdeveloped reproductive organs and lack wingsExamples are grasshoppers and termites

Page 22: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Complete Metamorphosis4 stages (egg, larva, pupa, and adult)Examples are butterflies, beetles and most other insects

Page 23: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Hormonal Control

Controlled by sequential expression of genesInteraction of 3 hormones (brain, molting and juvenile)

Page 24: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Brain hormone stimulates release of molting hormone (effect depends on level of juvenile hormone)Juvenile hormone level high -> molting hormone -> larva moltsJuvenile hormone level decreases -> molting hormone -> larva develop into pupaJuvenile hormone absent -> molting hormone -> pupa develops into adult

Page 25: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Importance of Metamorphism

Different developmental stages -> different functions (specializations)Eliminates energy conflicts between growth and reproductionEliminates competition between life stagesMultistage life cycle helps survive harsh weather

Page 26: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Defense

Defensive adaptations (agressive and passive) -> enhanced survivalCamouflage (cryptic coloration)Warning colorationMullerian mimicry- poisonous or dangerous species having similar patterns of coloration

Page 27: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Batesian mimicry- nonpoisonous or nondangerous species having similar pattern or color to a poisonous or dangerous unrelated species

Page 28: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Insect Behavior

Social behavior in honeybees Behaviors are genetically determined (instinctual or innate)Division of labor ->complex societies -> interdependence and need for communication

Page 29: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Hive consists of 3 distinct formsWorkers - sterile females; majority of individuals in hiveQueen - fertile female; only function is reproductionDrones - male bees; only function is

Page 30: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Workers

Average life span approximately 6 weeksPerform many functions at different times during their lives1st stage - feed honey and pollen to queen, drones and larvae (nurse bees); secrete royal jelly (high protein diet)2nd stage - Stop producing royal jelly and begin secreting wax -> build and repair hive, guard hive and fan wings to circulate fresh air in hive

Page 31: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

3rd stage - gather nector and pollen; legs modified with special structures to collect pollen; ovipositor modified for defense (stinger)

Page 32: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Queen and Drones

Queen identical to workers except continuously supplied with royal jelly; Queen secretes "queen factor" which prevents other female larvae from becoming sexually matureMates only once; sperm stored in seminal receptacle for up to 5 years or more

Page 33: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Drones (haploid (n) males) develop from unfertilized eggs; sole function to deliver sperm to queen; must be feed by workers

Page 34: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Communication

Pheromones - chemicals released by an animal that affects the behavior or development of other animals of the same speciesSoundsTapping, rubbing, or signaling

Page 35: Insects (Phylum Arthropoda; Sub-Phylum Uniramia)  Evolved over 300 million years ago  Most successful group of animals (700,000 to 10 million species)

Round dance - food source near but no indication of exact locationWaggle dance- food far from hive, dirction of food indicated by the angle of the straight run and the distance indicated by the duration and the number of waggles

Honey Bee communication