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Common Georgia Insects

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Presentation on theme: "Common Georgia Insects"— Presentation transcript:

1 Common Georgia Insects

2 Common Georgia Insects
Crickets: male vs. female shown Camel crickets Mole crickets

3 Common Georgian Insects
Hercules Beetle Large green with brown spots Male has horn Largest beetle in North America

4 Common Georgia Insects
Luna Moth Locally endangered due to pollution Males have more feathery antenna to pick up females pheromones.

5 Common Georgia Insects
Kudzu bug Not that common Invasive insect Eats kudzu (good) but starting to eat soybean crop (bad) Gives off stinky smell

6 Common Georgia Insects
Cicadas Live underground for up to 17 years Come out in masses Leave husk on tree at final molt Make “summer noise” Cicadas: the familiar sound of summer - CBS News Video

7 Common Georgia Insects
Velvet Ants (aka Cow killers) Actually female wasps Males have wings VERY PAINFUL STING

8 Zoology 11/7 1. Notes-Insect behaviors and social structure
Upcoming-Arthropod Unit Summative-11/12 Vocab quizzes Chelicerates 11/9 Zoology 11/7 1. Notes-Insect behaviors and social structure 2. Life of insects video

9 Insect Behavior and Metamorphosis

10 PHEROMONES Sex- excite or attract opposite sex
Trailing- laid down by foraging insects to help other members of colony find food. Alarm- warn others of danger Caste regulating- used by social insects to control the development of certain individuals in a colony.

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12 SOCIAL INSECTS Ants, termites, most bees & wasps
Traits of social insects Parental care of young Several generations present in same location Division of labor

13 DIVISION OF LABOR Reproductive caste Queen-
produces eggs to maintain colony. Regulates sex of offspring Parthenogenesis Unfertilized eggs- males Fertilized eggs- females

14 Queen termite

15 Division of Labor b. Drones- mate with new queens

16 Division of Labor Worker caste Sisters, all daughters of queen
Care for the eggs, larvae, queen & drones. Forage for food Maintain the nest Workers have gland in head that secretes royal jelly. This pheromone-laced liquid determines the larvae’s roll in the colony. Future workers receive jelly for 1st 3 days. Future queens receive jelly throughout larval stage.

17 Division of Labor f. Soldiers- defend the nest
Bees & wasps do not have soldier insects.

18 Inside a Termite Mound Mound is made of soil, termite saliva, and dung. Top has chimneys w/tunnels that draft hot air out of mound. Cool air enters near bottom of nest. Temperature control is important for growth of fungi(food).This is also where termites enter & exit. Termites live in bottom of nest underground Chambers for storing wood & growing fungus (food) underground

19 Solitary Insects Social Insects
Advantages Hide from predators No immediate competition Live in small spaces Exploit small food resources Group defense & alarm Food gathering Nest building Care of young Disadvantages Lack of social benefits Intense predation Parasitism disease

20 Other Insect Behaviors
ANT SLAVERY- Some ant species invade others nest & steal larvae. They take them back to the nest where they become workers. ANT FARMING- Some will “herd” aphids & protect them from predators. Aphids supply sweet liquid- honey dew which ants eat. Leaf cutter ants collect plants, compost it, and use it to grow fungus which they eat.

21 Paurometabolus Metamorphosis
Incomplete metamorphosis Egg Nymph- look like small adults Lack reproductive organs Lack wings 3. Adults- after several molts, reproductive organs & wings are grown.

22 Holometabolus metamorphosis
Complete metamorphosis Egg Larvae- wormlike (grubs- beetle larvae) No reproductive organs No wings Must eat constantly to store enough energy for pupa stage Pupa- inactive stage May be surrounded by cocoon (moths). Body is undergoing radical change. Adult- emerges w/ reproductive organs & wings.

23 ECONOMIC/ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNIFICANCE BENEFICIAL HARMFUL
Provide products EX: wax, honey, silk Parasites (fleas, lice) Pollinate 65% of all plant species (food crops) Vectors for disease (fleas spread bubonic plague) Control harmful insect population (praying mantis) Destroy $5 billion in crops annually Medicinal purposes (bee venom for M.S. and maggots for sores that won’t heal.) Some people are allergic (bees) Can cause death Soil insects aerate the soil & decompose Provide food source for many cultures

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25 C The reproductive males in a social insect colony are called?
a. Drones b. Workers c. nymphs Immature insects lack reproductive organs & ___. Mouths b. Wings c. Respiratory organs Use the diagrams below to answer questions 3-5. Which organism is the nymph? Which organism is the pupa? Which of these is holometabolous metamorphosis? C A B D E


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