Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

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Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

description

Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives. Uniramians – Centipedes, millipedes and insects. Characterized by one pair of antennae and appendages that don’t branch. Centipede and Millipede. Wormlike body Many leg-bearing segments. centipede. millipede. Centipedes. Carnivores - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

Page 1: Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

Page 2: Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives

Uniramians – Centipedes, millipedes and insects

Characterized by one pair of antennae and appendages that don’t branch

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Centipede and Millipede

• Wormlike body• Many leg-bearing

segments

centipede millipede

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Centipedes• Carnivores• Poison claws in

head• Eat arthropods,

earthworms, snakes, mice

• Have ONE pair of legs per segment (not necessarily 100 legs!)

• Have venomous bites against predators

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Cenitpede eating tarantula

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Centipede poison claw

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Centiped protecting hatchling

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Millipede• Two pair of legs

per segment• Herbivores• Feed on dead and

dying plant material

• Protect themselves by rolling into a ball or use “nasty chemicals” to dissuade their predators

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Millipedes

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MillipedeMillipede

Many legs!!

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MillipedeMillipede

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Millipede eating

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Protection

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Insects

• Have 3-part body• 3 pairs of legs

attached to thorax

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Feeding

• 3 pairs of appendages used as mouthparts

• One is the mandible

• Amazing modifications of the mouthparts

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mouthparts

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• Other modifications for feeding – mosquitos saliva – anticoagulant

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• Bees legs and bodies are covered in hair for collecting pollen

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• Bees have glands in abdomen that secrete wax to build bee hives for food storage and larvae nurseries

• Bee saliva changes nectar into honey

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movement• Three pairs of

walking legs are greatly varied

• Many insects have highly specialized legs for jumping and capturing prey

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flight

• Flying ability varies greatly

• Butterflies have limited manoeuvrability

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• Certain flies, bees and moths can fly extremely well

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• Thorax is filled with large muscles for wings

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Adaptations for flight

• Enlarged thorax for muscles

• Oversized mitochondria supply muscle cells with energy

• Special blood supply to wing muscles keep muscles warm (sometimes warmer than outside) for optimal efficiency

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Clear wing Clear wing butterflybutterfly

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Insect colonies• Collections of

individuals of the same species that live together

• SOCIETIES are colonies where individuals are DEPENDENT on the others for survival

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ANTS!

Ant ColonyAnt Colony

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• Termites, wasps, bees and ants form societies

• Have division of labour

• Different individuals (called castes) will have specialized bodies to perform their task in the society

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• Examples of castes:

• reproductive females (queens)

• reproductive males

• Workers• warriors

TermiteQueen

workers

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Termite soldier

Worker

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QUEEN

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• Reproductive males ONLY fertilize the eggs

• In BEE SOCIETIES, the queen mates with one or more males only ONCE.

• She receives all the sperm she needs in that mating

• The successful reproductive male then dies

• All unsuccessful reproductive males are turned out of the hive, and soon die

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• Workers do all the work for the hive

• Bee workers are all female and are able to do all jobs (except reproduce)

• Ant and termite workers are specialized for specific jobs

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Insect Communication• Non-social insects

communicate mainly to find mate only

• Cricket males rub their forelegs together

• Male cicadas buzz by vibrating a membrane on their abdomen

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• Male fireflies produce a series of light flashes

• The wingless females (glow worms) flash back their reply, and the males will find them

• (sometimes another genus will mimic this signal and prey on the expectant male)

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• Many female moths produce pheromones to attract their male

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• Social insects have more complicated communication systems

• Pheromones are often used

• Ex. Ants drag their abdomen all the way home from a food source to leave a trail for other ants to find the food

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• The Queen Bee produces “queen substance” that prevents other females being able to lay eggs

• When queen substance is low in the hive, the worker bees will feed a few female larvae a special diet which causes these larvae to develop into queens

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• Worker bees “dance” to tell other workers where they found food

• Two basic dances: the round dance and the waggle dance

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The Round Dance• The bee walks in a circle, then retraces that circle in the opposite direction

• Means that food is within 50 meters of the hive

• Good quality food will be indicated by more frequent changes of direction

• The kind of flower found is determined by smelling the messenger

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The Waggle Dance• The bee wiggles her abdomen while walking in a straight line

• She circles around and wiggles back up the same line

• She will then circle around on the other side of the line, and repeats

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• The waggle dance means that the food source found is more than 50 meters away from the hive

• The direction of the straight line is the direction the other bees must travel away from the hive to find the food

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1 million species of insects have been identified so far, which is about ½ of all animals known to science

Sizes could vary from .25mm to 50 cm

Many male insects have appendages called claspers, which help them stay in position during mating.

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Centipedes