EXOPTERYGOTA (Simple body change during growth)
- EXOPTERYGOTA includes 16 insect orders
- Order: Ephemeroptera (Ephemero: living for a day, petra: wing)
Example: Mayflies
Characteristics:
- Fragile insects with two pairs of wings: a triangular front pair and a rounded rear pair.
- The nymphs are aquatic, with tracheal gills.
- In many species, adults die within hours or days after reaching maturity.
- Order: Odonata (Odon: a tooth, toothed flies)
Example: Dragonflies, damselflies
Characteristics:
- Characterized by short antennae and inconspicuous
- Four large net-veined, membranous wings and a large head with large protruding eyes and long,
- slender bodies
- Mouth parts are well-developed chewing types, and nymphs are aquatic.c
- Order: Orthoptera (Straight wings)
Example: Grasshoppers, crickets
Characteristics:
- High-jumping insects, most of which can use their forewings to produce sounds.
- Chewinmouthpartsts
- The fore wings are modified into tegmina; the hind wings are membranous
- Cerci present.
- Order: Phasmatodea (Like a ghost)
Example: Walkingsticks
Characteristics:
- Includes both stick insects, which resemble sticks, and leaf insects, which look like leaves.
- Living in dense shrubbery in tropical regions, these insects are primarily vegetarian.
- Order: Grylloblattaria
Example: Rock crawlers, ice insects
Characteristics:
- Confined to cooler regions,
- Eyes absent or reduced, ocelli absent
- Mouth parts mandibulate
- Male genitalia asymmetrical
- Ovipositor well developed
- Order: Mantophasmatodea
Example: Gladiators
Characteristics
- Antennae slender, filiform.
- Mouthparts mandibulate, hypognathous.
- Body cylindrical.
- Tarsi 5-segmented.
- Secondarily wingless.
- Cerci sis hort, one-segmented.
- Order: Dermaptera
Example: Earwigs
Characteristics:
- Characterized by large, delicate wings
- Cerci modified into a pincers
- Omnivorous, nocturanal
- The common earwig is often found in gardens, where it feeds on waste.
- Order: Plecoptera
Example: Stoneflies
Characteristics:
- An ancient group of insects whose early stages occur in water.
- Adults commonly have delicate, transparent wings and long antennae.
- Order: Embioptera
Example: Web-spinners
Characteristics:
- Small insects that live communally and are most common in the tropics.
- Male winged, female wingless
- Silk glands and spinning haris on the first segment of the front tarsus
- Construct silk-lined tunnels and webs beneath stones and in the soil.
- Order: Zoraptera
Example: Angel wings
Characteristics:
- Extremely small insects are found in warm, humid climates, often in decaying wood.
- Both winged and wingless forms may occur in the same species.
- Order: Isoptera (equal wings)
Example: Termites
Characteristics:
- Social, nest-building insects with soft, whitish, or colorless bodies and strong biting mouthparts.
- Also called white ants because of their color and social habits
- Bears a pair of cerci
- Nest populations range from a few dozen members to hundreds of thousands
- Only kings and queens reproduce and are winged
- Order: Mantodea (like a prophet)
Example: Praying mantids
Characteristics:
- Elongated body
- Raptorial front legs with one or two rows of spines
- 2 pairs of wings, both of which are used in flight.
- Although some species have reduced wings and others are wingless
- Forewings protectively hardened to cover the membranous hind wings when at rest
- Very mobile triangular-shaped head with distinctive ocelli, large compound eyes
- Short to medium-sized filiform antennae
- Order: Blattodea (Insect avoiding light)
Example: Cockroaches
Characteristics:
- Mostly nocturnal insects, with biting mouthparts and legs that are adapted for swift running.
- The body is oval and dorsoventrally flattened, allowing the animals to hide in narrow spaces,
- for example under bark or in crevices of trees and rocks.
- Order: Homoptera
Example: True bugs
Characteristics:
- Characterized by sucking mouthparts used for feeding on plants and animal tissues.
- Order: Hemiptera (half wings)
Example: Bedbugs, aphids, cicadas, True bugs
Characteristics:
- Characterized by sucking mouthparts used for feeding on either plant or animal tissues.
- (Homoptera is merged in Hemiptera)
- Order: Thysanoptera
Example: Thrips
Characteristics:
- Minute insects with a fringe of fine hairs bordering each edge of their wings.
- Sometimes called thunder-flies because they are particularly active in summer thunderstorms.
- Order: Psocoptera
Example: Book-louse, Barklice, barflies, or booklice
Characteristics:
- (Psocoptera) are minute insects that live hidden away under bark, in leaf litter, or sometimes in your old books.
- Both adults and larvae can spin silk.
- Order: Phthiraptera (Louse wings)
Example: Chewing lice and sucking lice
Characteristics:
- Small, wingless insects, permanently parasitic on mammals and birds.
- Minute, wingless insects with mouthparts adapted for chewing and sucking
- Tiny insects are similar to biting lice, except that mouthparts are adapted for sucking.
- Found in the skin of birds and mammals, they contribute to the spread of some diseases, including typhus fever.