Why study insects Flashcards

1
Q

What is an insect?

A

6-legged arthropod with external mouthparts

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2
Q

Why study insects?

A
  • Diversity
  • Ecological importance
  • Importance to human activity
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3
Q

why study insects: diversity - why are insects so successful

A
  • old
  • Interactions with plants
  • create niches for more diversity
  • Small size
  • Flight
  • Body segmentation
  • Metamorphosis
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4
Q

why are insects so successful - old

A
  • Longer time to evolve than mammals
  • they are among the earliest land animals and thus can fill niches early
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5
Q

diversity - interactions with plants

A
  • 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
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6
Q

diversity - small size

A

Can specialize in a small thing (the bigger the body, the more things required to maintain it)

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7
Q

diversity - flight

A
  • 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
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8
Q

flight - what are ancestrally flightless insects

A

an insect’s ancestors did not have wings and the current lineage do not have wings

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9
Q

flight - what are secondarily flightless insects

A
  • an insect does not have wings but its ancestor does have wings
  • means that the wings were lost in the lineage
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10
Q

diversity - Body segmentation

A
  • 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
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11
Q

diversity - metamorphosis

A

Immatures and adults do not compete for resources

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12
Q

metamorphosis - Most diverse insects are Holometabolous but is this the reason for their diversity?

A

it is unclear whether the diversity is due to metamorphosis since those insects interact with plants as well

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13
Q

why study insects - what are the ecological importance of insects

A
  • Pollination
  • Decomposition
  • Food web
  • Ecological dominance of social insects
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14
Q

ecological importance - pollination

A
  • Flowers exist to get the attention of insects
  • No insects, no flowering plants
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15
Q

ecological importance - decomposition

A
  • Beetles and flies are nature’s cleanup crew
  • Termites decompose cellulose
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16
Q

ecological importance - food web

A
  • Insects are food for most birds, bats, and many other organisms
  • Also, insect herbivory (consumption of plants) structures plant communities
17
Q

ecological importance - Ecological dominance of social insects

A
  • Sociality is perhaps the most striking and sophisticated by insects
  • No societies, including those of humans, have such efficiency
  • The biomass of ants in the world’s tropical river basins is estimated to be up to 4 times that of vertebrates
18
Q

why study insects - importance to human activity

A
  • agriculture
  • ecological destruction
  • disease
19
Q

importance to human activity - agricultre

A
  • Crop pests (also forest pests)
  • Pollination
  • Pest control
20
Q

importance to human activity - ecological destruction

A

Tiny beetles can destroy forests

21
Q

importance to human activity - disease

A

Insect vectors of pandemic diseases have killed many times more humans than any predator