Why study insects Flashcards
What is an insect?
6-legged arthropod with external mouthparts
Why study insects?
- Diversity
- Ecological importance
- Importance to human activity
why study insects: diversity - why are insects so successful
- old
- Interactions with plants
- create niches for more diversity
- Small size
- Flight
- Body segmentation
- Metamorphosis
why are insects so successful - old
- Longer time to evolve than mammals
- they are among the earliest land animals and thus can fill niches early
diversity - interactions with plants
- Plants and insects have co-evolved
- Specialization on specific plant species part = massive number of niches
- Chemical defense arms races between plants and insects drive diversity, ecology
- Pollination enabled rise of angiosperm
diversity - small size
Can specialize in a small thing (the bigger the body, the more things required to maintain it)
diversity - flight
- Flight evolved a very long time ago
- Flying insects likely drove evolution of flight in other groups: if you can fly, you can prey on insects
- Wings vastly improved mobility, dispersal, and escape
flight - what are ancestrally flightless insects
an insect’s ancestors did not have wings and the current lineage do not have wings
flight - what are secondarily flightless insects
- an insect does not have wings but its ancestor does have wings
- means that the wings were lost in the lineage
diversity - Body segmentation
- Having six legs allows for the front pair to be used without losing the ability to walk
- Wings facilitate mobility, but when the fore pair is hardened, they protect the flight pair and abdomen
- exoskeleton guards against injury but also protects insects from their own toxic secretion
diversity - metamorphosis
Immatures and adults do not compete for resources
metamorphosis - Most diverse insects are Holometabolous but is this the reason for their diversity?
it is unclear whether the diversity is due to metamorphosis since those insects interact with plants as well
why study insects - what are the ecological importance of insects
- Pollination
- Decomposition
- Food web
- Ecological dominance of social insects
ecological importance - pollination
- Flowers exist to get the attention of insects
- No insects, no flowering plants
ecological importance - decomposition
- Beetles and flies are nature’s cleanup crew
- Termites decompose cellulose