Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives. Uniramians – Centipedes, millipedes and insects Characterized by one pair of antennae and appendages that don’t.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
INSECTS HOLT CH PG
Advertisements

Arthropods Have Exoskeletons & Joints
 Insects are like arthropods because they have a segmented body, an exoskeleton, and jointed appendages  They have a body divided into three parts:
Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.
Bees.
Arthropods!!!.
COMMUNICATIONS Stimulus.
Insects Block 1 January 13, 2015.
Minibeasts Can you find out information about your minibeast from this presentation?
Chapter 2 Section 3 - Insects. Section 3: Insects  Largest group of animals on Earth  Live everywhere but the ocean  Harmful: termites, weevils, mosquitoes.
Section 2 Insect Behavior
End Show Slide 1 of 44 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology.
Phylum Arthropoda Textbook pgs
Insects and Their Relatives Section Insect diversity The largest group of animals Four important orders:  Coleoptera – ‘shield-winged’ like beetles.
Insect Communication A. Sound Communication 1.intraspecies 2.interspecies B. Chemical Communication 1.pheromones 2.allomones 3.kairomones C. Visual Communication.
Ch. 37 Insects Most diverse and largest number of species of any class of organism. They were present on earth before the dinosaurs, over 300 million.
Diversity of Insects Arthropods make up about three-fourths of all named animal species. About 80 percent of arthropods are insects. Insects and Their.
End Show Slide 1 of 44 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology.
Arthropods. The phylum Arthropoda makes up over 75% of the world’s species. Arthropods include insects, centipedes, millipedes, spiders, ticks, scorpions,
Adapted from Dr. Dewey Caron PowerPoint
{ Ants and the City Can urban green spaces help preserve native ant metapopulations?
Honeybees. Honeybees Contd…. Honeybee is a social insect that can survive only as a member of a community or colony Honeybee is a social insect that.
Bees! What’s the Buzz?.
Animal Kingdom Phylum Arthropoda Chp 26. Why are there so many arthropods? Appeared more than 600mya Started in water then moved to land First body form.
Bee dissection. Bees are haploid-diploid Bee castes Queen: long abdomen, jaws help her make nest, smooth sting can be used repeatedly. Can lay 1500 eggs.
By sefa sanci · ·· Antenni Fine breakable wings Black and white and yellow body · 2 sets of wings It has a sting What do bumble bees look like. beebee.
By: Megan Smith.  What are the different types of a honey bee?  What is the job of a worker bee?  What is the job of a drone bee?
INSECT REVIEW. Hard, outer wings of insects such as beetles. SHELL-LIKE.
How could you tell a spider apart from a crayfish?
Minibeasts We did some research on minibeasts….. Knockconan NS 2010.
ARTHROPODS.  Insects, spiders, crabs, and lobsters are all arthropods, so there are a lot of arthropods on Earth. The earliest arthropods on Earth developed.
Wasps BY SABRINA & ROMINA.
 What is an arthropod?  In the Phylum Arthropoda there are crabs, spiders, and insects.  They have segmented bodies, tough exoskeletons, and jointed.
UNIT 1 Chapter 2–Insects and Spiders. pp Do you know? What are two characteristics of an arthropod?What are two characteristics of an arthropod?
Honey bee By Jerome.
Complex Invertebrates
Chapter 28 Review Arthropods Charles Page High School Dr. Stephen L. Cotton.
Chapter 28 Arthropods and Echinoderms. Phylum Arthropoda - Arthropods  Largest and most successful phylum  75% of all animals!  Segmented body  Tough.
Subphylum Hexapoda Phylum Arthropoda.
Insect Characteristics
Arthropods Why So Successful? Why So Abundant?. Why So Successful? Why So Abundant? Fact: There are more than 1 million different species of arthropod.
Chapter 28 Arthropods Centipedes and Millipedes. 14. Subphylum Uniramia –Centipedes, millipedes and insects. A. Class Chilopoda 1. Centipedes a). One.
An arthropod is an invertebrate with an exoskeleton, a segmented body, and jointed legs.
Honey bees.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Diversity Ants, mosquitoes, gnats, flies, bees, crickets all belong.
An arthropod is an invertebrate with an exoskeleton, a segmented body, and jointed legs.
Arthropods By nearly any measure, the most successful animals on the planet are the arthropods. They have conquered land, sea and air, and make up over.
Arthropods By nearly any measure, the most successful animals on the planet are the arthropods. They have conquered land, sea and air, and make up over.
5/11/15 Mr. Faia 6th Grade Science
Phylum Arthropoda By Kayla Wilkinson.
Class Insecta.
Chapter 28 Insects 28-3.
Arthropods.
Insects.
Insect Behavior Ch.37-2.
28-4 Insects & Their Relatives
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
28-4 Insects & Their Relatives
Chapter 28 Insects 28-3.
Ch. 40 Insects Most diverse and largest number of species of any class of organism. They were present on earth before the dinosaurs, over 300 million years.
Arthropods Part 3.
Arthropods Have Exoskeletons & Joints
Arthropoda.
Chapter 23 Arthropod Review.
Insect Behavior It’s the bees’ knees!.
Minibeasts Can you find out information about your minibeast from this presentation?
ARTHROPODS.
Bugscope Sarah McElroy EDUC 140
Presentation transcript:

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 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

Cenitpede eating tarantula

Centipede poison claw

Centiped protecting hatchling

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

Millipedes

Millipede Many legs!!

Millipede

Millipede eating

Protection

Insects Have 3-part body 3 pairs of legs attached to thorax

Feeding 3 pairs of appendages used as mouthparts One is the mandible Amazing modifications of the mouthparts

mouthparts

Other modifications for feeding – mosquitos saliva – anticoagulant

Bees legs and bodies are covered in hair for collecting pollen

Bees have glands in abdomen that secrete wax to build bee hives for food storage and larvae nurseries Bee saliva changes nectar into honey

movement Three pairs of walking legs are greatly varied Many insects have highly specialized legs for jumping and capturing prey

flight Flying ability varies greatly Butterflies have limited manoeuvrability

Certain flies, bees and moths can fly extremely well

Thorax is filled with large muscles for wings

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

Clear wing butterfly

Insect colonies Collections of individuals of the same species that live together SOCIETIES are colonies where individuals are DEPENDENT on the others for survival

ANTS! Ant Colony

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

Examples of castes: reproductive females (queens) reproductive males Workers warriors Termite Queen  workers

 Termite soldier Worker 

QUEEN

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

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

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

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)

Many female moths produce pheromones to attract their male

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

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

Worker bees “dance” to tell other workers where they found food Two basic dances: the round dance and the waggle dance

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

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

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

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.

Centipedes