An insect’s body divides into three sections. The     head holds the eyes, antennae, and mouthparts. The thorax bears  three pairs of     jointed legs and two pairs of wings. The abdomen contains the  digestive system     and the sex organs. Most insects undergo a complete change between  the larval     stage and the adult form.

The dragonfly’s slim body and long,  thin wings make it one of     the fastest fliers in the insect world. The front wings and the back  wings beat     alternately, giving the dragonfly excellent flight control.  Dragonflies have     large, compound eyes, each made up of about 30,000 lenses, and can  see prey up     to 12 m (39 ft) away. The legs form a basket to hold food.

A young dragonfly, known  as a nymph, lives underwater. As it grows     bigger, it moults – its skin splits and a new, larger one forms.  Each     time, the nymph begins to look more like the adult dragonfly. For  the last     moult, the nymph climbs out of the water, and the adult dragonfly  emerges.

A butterfly uncoils its long  proboscis to sip nectar from flowers.     Insect mouthparts are very varied. Flies have a spongy pad,  horseflies have     scissor-like jaws, and mosquitoes have a sharp proboscis.

This cockchafer beetle has  two pairs of wings but only uses the back     pair to fly. The hardened front wings, called elytra, cover the back  wings when     they are not in use, protecting them. Some insects have muscles  attached     directly to the wings, others move their wings by changing their  body shape. A     small number of insects, such as silverfish, do not have wings.
CLASS: INSECTA
Order: Odonata
Features: two pairs of matching wings, long abdomen, carnivorous when adult, dragonflies rest with wings open, damselfies with wings folded

Order: Orthoptera
Features: straight, tough forewings, short antennae, escape by jumping on powerful hindlegs, chewing mouthparts

Order: Lepidoptera
Features: scaled bodies and wings, proboscis, antennae, butterflies have club-ended antennae and fly by day, moths fly by night

Order: Hemiptera
Features: two pairs of wings, protruding rostrum (mouthpiece) that is used for piercing and sucking

Order: Coleoptera
Features: tough elytra (front wings) fold over membranous hindwings protecting them, can squeeze into small spaces

Order: Diptera
Features: most have a single pair of flight wings, some have a thin body and thread-like antennae, others a bigger body and short antennae

Order: Hymenoptera
Features: two pairs of membranous wings joined in flight by tiny hooks, many have a narrow “waist”
No comments:
Post a Comment