Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?

Entomology/TOC = Insects = Insects are animals with three body segments (the word insect means segmented ) the head the abdomen and the thorax. Insects have typically three pairs of legs located on the abdomen however there are exceptions such as brush footed butterflies. Insects belong to the taxon...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Book
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Entomology/What_are_insects%3F
id ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:4024:23114
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:4024:23114 2024-03-31T07:49:19+00:00 Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects? https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Entomology/What_are_insects%3F eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2024-03-02T17:31:11Z Entomology/TOC = Insects = Insects are animals with three body segments (the word insect means segmented ) the head the abdomen and the thorax. Insects have typically three pairs of legs located on the abdomen however there are exceptions such as brush footed butterflies. Insects belong to the taxonomic class Insecta which is just one class of Phylum Arthropoda. The arthropods also includes Crustacea (crabs lobsters etc.) Arachnida (spiders mites etc.) and Myriapoda (Centipedes and Millipedes). The class Insecta is closely related to the class Entognatha (Collembola Diplura and Protura) which is usually included in the study of entomology. Both Insecta and Entognatha are within the subphylum Hexapoda. Insects have a wide range of life cycles but there are some basic similarities. They almost all begin as eggs which vary widely in shape and size. Then insects undergo a period of growth. Some then undergo a metamorphosis ( huge change ) into an adult form. Insects such as silverfish (order Zygentoma) do not undergo metamorphosis at all — they grow directly from hatching to their full size and molt several times as a mature adult. Some Insects such as true bugs (order Hemiptera) and grasshoppers (order Orthoptera) undergo an incomplete metamorphosis. When they hatch from eggs they are called nymphs . These nymphs will eventually grow into their final adult form. They do not molt after that. Insects such as butterflies moths and flies undergo a complete metamorphosis. When they hatch from eggs they are called larvae . Once they have grown through several periods called instars they become pupae (in butterflies it s called a chrysalis). Eventually an adult or imago phase will emerge from the pupa. Insects are very successful organisms. They exist in every type of terrestrial habitat including some flies native to Antarctica. Insects also vary widely in shape size colour etc. There are currently well over 900 thousand named species of insect and estimates place the total number of species between 2 and 30 million. ... Book Antarc* Antarctica WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
institution Open Polar
collection WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
op_collection_id ftwikibooks
language English
description Entomology/TOC = Insects = Insects are animals with three body segments (the word insect means segmented ) the head the abdomen and the thorax. Insects have typically three pairs of legs located on the abdomen however there are exceptions such as brush footed butterflies. Insects belong to the taxonomic class Insecta which is just one class of Phylum Arthropoda. The arthropods also includes Crustacea (crabs lobsters etc.) Arachnida (spiders mites etc.) and Myriapoda (Centipedes and Millipedes). The class Insecta is closely related to the class Entognatha (Collembola Diplura and Protura) which is usually included in the study of entomology. Both Insecta and Entognatha are within the subphylum Hexapoda. Insects have a wide range of life cycles but there are some basic similarities. They almost all begin as eggs which vary widely in shape and size. Then insects undergo a period of growth. Some then undergo a metamorphosis ( huge change ) into an adult form. Insects such as silverfish (order Zygentoma) do not undergo metamorphosis at all — they grow directly from hatching to their full size and molt several times as a mature adult. Some Insects such as true bugs (order Hemiptera) and grasshoppers (order Orthoptera) undergo an incomplete metamorphosis. When they hatch from eggs they are called nymphs . These nymphs will eventually grow into their final adult form. They do not molt after that. Insects such as butterflies moths and flies undergo a complete metamorphosis. When they hatch from eggs they are called larvae . Once they have grown through several periods called instars they become pupae (in butterflies it s called a chrysalis). Eventually an adult or imago phase will emerge from the pupa. Insects are very successful organisms. They exist in every type of terrestrial habitat including some flies native to Antarctica. Insects also vary widely in shape size colour etc. There are currently well over 900 thousand named species of insect and estimates place the total number of species between 2 and 30 million. ...
format Book
title Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
spellingShingle Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
title_short Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
title_full Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
title_fullStr Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: Entomology/What are insects?
title_sort wikibooks: entomology/what are insects?
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Entomology/What_are_insects%3F
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
_version_ 1795038495611289600