HAYWARD Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types pf habitat

A

Terrestrial

  • rainforest
  • deserts
  • houses
  • Antarctica

Aquatic - freshwater

  • lakes
  • rivers
  • glacial streams

Marine- sea-air interface only
- very few species

Parasitic - habitat = another organism

  • many parasitic wasp
  • several parasitic flies
  • parasitic beetles
  • ectoparasitic moth
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2
Q

Describe the life cycle of an aphid parasite

A
  • Oviposition
  • Growth of parasite larvae. Greenbug alive
  • Greenbug dies. Parasite pupates. Result is mummy
  • Adult parasite emerges
  • Adult parasite
  • Oviposition

Majority of insects have ~1 year life cycle. Shortest generation time = 2 weeks

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3
Q

Describe the modification of insect mouthparts

A

Ladybird - biting mouthparts; diet - aphids
Mayfly nymph - filter feeding; diet - aphids
Aphid - piercing and sucking; feeding damage & transmits disease
Mosquito - piercing and sucking; disease transmission

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4
Q

Describe the different types of sociality

A

Solitary - preying mantis, locusts, bees
Gregarious - act as individual but aggregate in groups e.g. bees, locust, collembola
Sub-social - most primitive level of interaction involving parents and offspring e.g. bees and wasps
Highly social - complex social ‘caste’ system e.g. ants, bees, termites

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5
Q

What are some reasons for success and diversity

A
  • exoskeleton
  • long history
  • short generation time and fecundity
  • metamorphosis
  • adaptability to changing environments
  • small size
  • sociality
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6
Q

What are the common features of insects

A

Body divided into:

  • head: 1 pair of antenna and mandibles, 2 pairs of maxillae
  • thorax: 3 pairs of legs, usually 2 pairs of wings
  • abdomen: no locomotory appendages genital opening usually at posterior end
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7
Q

How are insects classified

A
  • all insects are in the class INSECTA
  • there are 2 sub-classes: Apterygota and Pterygota
  • the sub-class Pterygota has two divisions
    1. Exopterygota (Hemimetabola)
    2. Endopterygota (Holometabola)
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8
Q

What are the main features of Entognatha and Apterygote insects

A
  • no wings; a primitive feature
  • metamorphosis slight or absent (nymphs/ young are effectively miniature adults - cant reproduce)
  • one or more pairs of pre-genital appendages on abdomen
  • adult mandibles articulate with head capsule at single point
  • contains collembola (springtails) and Thysanura (silverfish)
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9
Q

What are the main features of Pterygote

A
  • winged (sometimes secondary wingless)
  • metamorphosis occurs
  • adults have no pre-genital abdominal appendages
  • adult mandibles articulate with head capsules at 2 points
  • contains all the important order
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10
Q

What are the main features of Exopterygote

A
  • single metamorphosis
  • immature states are nymphs - increasingly resemble adult
  • pupa rarely present
  • wings develop externally
  • nymphs (called naiads if aquatic) and adults often feed on same food resources
  • includes: dragonfly, termites, cockroaches, greenfly
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11
Q

What are the main features of Endopterygote

A
  • metamorphosis complex
  • immature stages are larvae - differ from adults in form and function
  • larvae assimilates food
  • pupa present - does not feed, tissues reorganised
  • wings develop internally
  • contains: flies, butterflies, moths, bees, wasps, ants
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12
Q

Describe sexual reproduction in insects

A

requires synchronisation with each other and environment
Mechanisms
- overt displays e.g. fireflies
- attraction to resource - food
- pheromones - typically female
- swarms - mostly male
- copulation - direct except in apterygotes

Old Age Pensioners Sing Carols

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13
Q

Describe asexual reproduction in insects

A

Parthogenesis (development from an unfertilised egg)

  • can be obligatory or facultative
  • virtually all order have at least one asexual representative
  • highly successful means of rapidly exploiting favourable conditions
  • female only eggs = thelytokous
  • male only eggs = arrhenotokous
  • male and female eggs = amphitokous

Hermaphroditism (male and female reproductive organs)

Polyembryony (two or more embryos from one egg)

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14
Q

What is phenology

A

the study of timing of periodic plant and animal life cycle events and how these are influenced by seasonal and inter annual variations in climate

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15
Q

What are environmental gradients

A

Photoperiod - constant recurring gradient = noise free signal

  • long day and increasing day lengths = good indicators of spring or simmer (migration north)
  • short day and decreasing day length = good indicators of autumn or winter (migration south)

Temperatrue - inconsistent/ variable = noisy signal
Warm or cold spell not a good indicator

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16
Q

What is polyphenism

A

The capacity of a genotype to produce two or more distinct phenotypes in response to an environmental factor such as temperature, photoperiod, or nutrition

17
Q

What are collembola

A
  • ancient order, now considered to be separate class within super class Hexapoda
  • apterygote - without wings, no metamorphosis
  • two main sub-orders (elongate and globular)
    Habitat: soil and leaf litter
    Diet: detritus
18
Q

What are the differences between elongate and globular collembola

A

Elongate: The spring of springtails = collembolan furcula: function – to escape predators and possible unfavourable environments

Globular:

  • many are soil dwellers
  • furcula often reduced
  • thorax and abdomen fused
19
Q

What are the 5 categories of sound production

A
  1. Tremulation (vibration) e.g. species-specific flight
  2. Percussion
  3. Stridulation (frictional mechanism)
  4. Click mechanism - deformation of modified area of cuticle
  5. Air expulsion (rare)

Terrance Plays Sound Concerts Always

20
Q

Describe the 4 main types of insects in a colony

A
  1. Primary reproductive (eventually become King and Queen) - winged adults (swarmers) Role: establish colony
  2. Secondary (supplementary reproductive if either primary dies) - wingless adults or reduced wings
  3. Workers - wingless and sterile. Roles: foraging, food storage, brood/ nest maintenance
  4. Soldiers - wingless and sterile. Functional morphology: mandibulate and nasute (chemical defence). Role = defence
21
Q

What are the 2 main feeding habits of termites

A
  1. Wood (rotten or sound), grass, fungi, normal diet or workers
  2. Prepared diet
    - stomodaeal - salivary secretion and regurgitates intestinal contents
    - proctodaeal - droplets from the rectal pouch taken from anus after tactile stimulation
    - prepaid diets are sole diet of soldiers