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Insect Morphology Basics

This document provides an overview of insect morphology and physiology. It describes the basic body plan of insects including their three-part body structure of head, thorax, and abdomen. Key internal systems like respiration, digestion, excretion and circulation are summarized. Specific anatomical features such as mouthparts, legs, wings and sensory organs are defined. The document serves as a primer on the fundamental concepts of entomology.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
819 views9 pages

Insect Morphology Basics

This document provides an overview of insect morphology and physiology. It describes the basic body plan of insects including their three-part body structure of head, thorax, and abdomen. Key internal systems like respiration, digestion, excretion and circulation are summarized. Specific anatomical features such as mouthparts, legs, wings and sensory organs are defined. The document serves as a primer on the fundamental concepts of entomology.

Uploaded by

jyc rose
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • Insect Morphology
  • Orientation of Mouthparts
  • Compound Eyes and Antennae
  • Legs and Wings
  • Digestive System
  • Insect Abdomen
  • Excretory System
  • Nervous System
  • Respiratory System
  • Reproductive System
  • Circulatory System
  • Musculature

BASIC CONCEPTS IN ENTOMOLOGY

Angelina T. Gonzales
Associate Professor –CSU @ Lal-lo
INSECT MORPHOLOGY
MORPHOLOGY: THE STUDY OF FORM AND FUNCTION

Insects are arthropods: Arthropoda: "jointed feet"


Insecta: from insectum; to cut into

General characteristics of arthropods:

Segmented bodies
Paired, segmented appendages
Bilateral Symmetry
Exoskeleton
Dorsal heart and open circulatory system
Ventral nerve cord

General characteristics of insects:

The body is comprised of 3 distinct body regions -- head, thorax, and abdomen (HAT)
The thorax of adults bears 3 pairs of legs and 2 pairs of wings
The "breathing" system is comprised of air tubes

A LOOK AT THE OUTSIDE OF AN INSECT:

The exoskeleton is comprised of sclerites: hardened plates


Tergites: Dorsal plates
Sternites: Ventral plates
Pleuron: Lateral area, often membranous

The integument (body covering) is comprised of multiple layers:

The cuticle is the outermost layer, covering the entire outer body surface, it also lines the air
tubes (tracheae, etc.), salivary glands, foregut, and hindgut
Strength and resilience (not hardness) are provided by chitin, a nitrogen-containing
polymer common to the arthropods

The insect head bears: mouthparts, eyes, and antennae (EMA)

Mouthparts:

Labrum (1) (Upper lip)


Mandibles (2) (Jaws)
Maxillae (2) (More jaws)
Labium (1) (Lower lip)
Hypopharynx (1) (Tongue-like, bears openings of
salivary ducts)
Labrum-epipharynx (1) (Fleshy inner surface of labrum -
sensory)

1
Mouthparts may be modified greatly from the "generalized" plan ... see illustrations of the cicada and
the house fly in comparison with the general form exhibited by the grasshopper.

The orientation of the mouthparts on the head may differ, and they may be described as:

Prognathous: projecting forward (horizontal)


Hypognathous: projecting downward
Opisthognathous: projecting obliquely or posteriorly

2
Eyes:

Compound eyes: Individual units are facets or ommatidia. 28,000 ommatidia comprise a
single compound eye in dragonflies
Ocellus (Ocelli), or simple eyes: small, usually a single lens

Antennae:

2 basal segments are the scape & pedicel


The filament is comprised of several segments (actually pseudo-segments lacking
independent musculature)

a. setaceous: hair-like
b. and f. filiform: thread-like
c. moniliform: bead-like
d. serrate: sawtoothed
e. pectinate: comb-like
g. capitate: headlike (less enlarged at the tip would be clavate -- clublike)
h. geniculate: elbowed
i. lamellate: plate-like
j. plumose: plumed or feather-like

The insect thorax:


3 distinct segments:
Prothorax: Bears 1 pair of legs
Mesothorax: Bears 1 pair of legs, 1 pair of wings
Metathorax: Bears 1 pair of legs, 1 pair of wings

Sclerites that comprise the thorax are given specific names; each may be preceded by the
prefixes pro-, meso-, or meta-.

Notum: Dorsal plate. The pronotum is the dorsal sclerite on the prothorax.

Pleuron: Lateral plate


Sternum: Ventral plate

Legs are segmented. The names for each segment are (in order, beginning at the body and progressing
outward.
coxa
trochanter
femur
tibia
tarsus
3
The tarsus may be comprised of multiple segments (not really true segments; more accurately
called tarsomeres); the terminal segment usually bears claws.

Legs may be modified for specific purposes:

Jumping: saltatorial -- grasshoppers, fleas


Running (or walking): cursorial -- ground beetles, cockroaches
Clinging: scansorial -- lice, sheep keds
Grasping (holding prey): raptorial -- mantids, giant water bugs
Digging: fossorial -- cicada nymphs, mole crickets
Swimming: natatorial -- water scavenger beetle, backswimmer

Wings

Mesothoracic wing = forewing


Metathoracic wing = hindwing

Wing veins and cells between veins are named according to the standard system illustrated
below:

4
Wing modifications:

Halteres (Halter): Knob-like reduced hind wings of Diptera


Elytra (Elytron): Hardened, protective forewings of Coleoptera
Hemelytra: Half-hardened, half-membranous forewings of Hemiptera
(Heteroptera)
Fringed wings: Modified wing structure of the Thysanoptera (Thrips)
Scales and hairs: Lepidoptera, Trichoptera, some Diptera

The insect abdomen …

… is comprised of 6 to 10 segments. Terminal structures include:

Cerci: Paired sensory projections from the terminal abdominal segment


Ovipositor: Egg-laying apparatus (may be modified for other purposes)
Aedeagus: Male copulatory organ, analogous to the penis in vertebrates

(Homologous = structures with similar evolutionary origin but different function, such as the different
forms of mandibles in insects. Analogous = structures with similar functions but different evolutionary
origins, such as the wings in birds versus insects.)

Inside the insect:

Digestive System: A tube that extends from the mouth to the anus; there are 3 sections:

Foregut:

Pharynx (throat)
Esophagus (gullet)
Crop (storage)
Proventriculus (may be muscled, gizzard-like)

Midgut:
Gastric caecae (blind sacs) (food storage and enzymes)
Ventriculus (most digestion, absorption here)

Hindgut:
Anterior intestine (excretory organs empty in)
Rectum (reabsorption of water)
Anus

In embryonic development, the foregut and hindgut are formed from ectoderm ... their surfaces
are shed during molting. The midgut is formed from the endoderm; its surface is retained during
molting.

5
DIGESTION:

Some insects use external digestion in addition that which occurs internally ...

leafhoppers inject saliva into plant tissues


house flies regurgitate salivary enzymes onto the surface of food
diving beetles inject prey with salivary juices

Most digestive action is in the midgut; gastric caecae are rich in enzymes. Enzyme diversity varies
with the range of foods that different insects eat ... more proteolytic enzymes in blood feeders,
cellulase in wood-boring beetles, etc.

EXCRETORY SYSTEM:

Purpose of excretion:
Removal of nitrogenous wastes
Maintenance / regulation of salts and water balance

Primary excretory organs: Malpighian tubules and the rectum. Malpighian tubules "float" in the
hemolymph; active transport moves wastes (uric acid salts from the fat body) into tubules.
Malpighian tubules empty into the hind gut; water is reabsorbed. Excretory and fecal wastes are
combined.

NERVOUS SYSTEM:

The brain = the supraesophageal ganglion (nerve cell mass above the esophagus)

Optic lobes (paired): the largest lobes of the brain; each protrudes from the
protocerebrum
Protocerebrum (paired): innervates compound eyes and ocelli
Deutocerebrum (paired) innervates antennae
Tritocerebrum (paired) connect to the visceral nervous system
Circumesophageal connectives (paired) -- from the dorsal brain to the ventral nerve cord

6
The ventral nerve cord: connects segmental ganglia (nerve cell bundles).
Thoracic and abdominal ganglia control many body operations.

The corpora cardiaca and corpora allata are neuroendocrine glands.

Chemoreceptors (taste and smell) take the form of sensory pegs on various body structures,
particularly antennae, tarsi, and palpi.

Photoreceptors are located in the compound eyes and the ocelli (and also the cuticle).

Hearing organs may be located on the abdomen (grasshoppers), tibiae (crickets), or thorax (moths).

RESPIRATORY SYSTEM (TRACHEAL SYSTEM):

Spiracles: External openings on each side of most body segments


Tracheae: large tubes that run the length of the body on each side. Smaller tubes are
called tracheal branches and tracheoles.

Air sacs that store air (air, not just oxygen) may be located in the abdomen and/or the thorax.

7
Special modifications:

Stoneflies and mayflies: external gills


Dragonflies: Rectal gills; water is drawn in and out over these gills
Aquatic beetles (some): Plastron ... air bubble held against the abdomen by the
spiracles

CIRCULATORY SYSTEM:

Insects have what is termed an "open" circulatory system. It is comprised of a dorsal vessel
with a posterior "heart" and an anterior aorta. The heart pumps blood (hemolymph) forward and
empties it over the brain. Blood percolates backwards. Specialized pulsating organs in some insects
contribute to blood flow, including flow through wing veins.

The role of blood in insects is the transport of nutrients, wastes, and hormones. It is NOT the
primary means of moving oxygen and carbon dioxide. (There is no hemoglobin in insects except in
immature Chironomus spp. and a few others.)

REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM:

Structures are named by similar terms as those in vertebrates.

Key differences:

Spermatheca: Receives and stores sperm in the female


Spermathecal gland: Supplies nutrients for maintaining the sperm (in the female)
Female accessory glands: Secrete adhesive and protective coverings for eggs
Spermatophore: A "capsule" that contains sperm (spermatophore is produced by the
male)

8
Musculature:

Muscles and flight:

Direct musculature is involved in the flight of more primitive insects (for example, the
Odonata); but in more advanced fliers, only indirect flight muscles are used. Indirect muscle
contractions and relaxations move the notum up and down, and thoracic pleurites serve as a fulcrum.

This mechanism allows phenomenal wingbeat frequencies ... 1,000 beats per second.

To be continued…. Good luck guys..

BASIC CONCEPTS IN ENTOMOLOGY
Angelina T. Gonzales
Associate Professor –CSU @ Lal-lo
INSECT MORPHOLOGY
MORPHOLOGY: THE STUDY O
Mouthparts may be modified greatly from the "generalized" plan ... see illustrations of the cicada and 
the house fly in comp
Eyes: 
Compound eyes: 
Individual units are facets or ommatidia. 28,000 ommatidia comprise a 
single compound eye in dragonfl
The tarsus may be comprised of multiple segments (not really true segments; more accurately 
called tarsomeres); the terminal
Wing modifications:
Halteres (Halter): 
Knob-like reduced hind wings of Diptera
Elytra (Elytron): 
Hardened, protective forew
DIGESTION:
Some insects use external digestion in addition that which occurs internally ...
leafhoppers inject saliva into pl
The ventral nerve cord: connects segmental ganglia (nerve cell bundles). 
Thoracic and abdominal ganglia control many body op
Special modifications:
Stoneflies and mayflies: 
external gills
Dragonflies: 
Rectal gills; water is drawn in and out over th
Musculature:
Muscles and flight:
Direct musculature is involved in the flight of more primitive insects (for exa

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