Insect Orders
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The Three Insect Divisions

Below is a brief description of the three insect divisions.

Information on the thirty insect orders listed on this site can be obtained by clicking an order button underneath each of the three divisions


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ApterygoteThe Primative wingless insects ExopterygoteInsects that have wings which develop externally EndopterygoteInsects that have wings which develop internally

The Apterygotes are mostly small wingless insects living on and within decaying vegetation. The name Apterygote actually means without wings. Although it is an area of great debate among taxonomists it is generally believed that these insects have never had wings throughout their evolutionary history. Studies of the thorax of many Apterygote insects has failed to reveal any vestiges of flight structures such as those seen in fleas and lice which have lost their wings as an adaptation to their parasitic lifestyles. The presence of abdominal appendages, arranged on either side of the body are believed to indicate a multi-legged ancestor. Another characteristic of Apterygotes is either no or only minimal metamorphosis. Five orders are recognised although their relationship to each other is not clear at present. Some entomologists place the Protura and the Collembola into separate classes within the Arthropoda, believing that they are not insects at all.


The Apterygote Orders

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Diplura(two-pronged bristletails) Protura(no common name) Collembola(Springtails) Archaeognatha(Bristletails) Zygentoma(Silverfish)


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The Exopterygotes are insects which have two pairs of wings, or did have at some point in their evolutionary history. These insects have what is called an incomplete metamorphosis with the young stages showing a degree of similarity with the imago stage. This division is also referred to as the Hemimetabola, a name based on the incomplete metamorphosis. The name Exopterygotes stems from the type of wing bud development. The wings arise from external buds on the thorax which increase in size as the young insect passes through its nymphal stages. This type of external growth also occurs with the genitalia. This type of incomplete metamorphosis was referred to as ametabolous or paurometabolous by Snodgrass (1954). There is often a considerably change from the last nymphal stage to the adult imago, although these changes are not always easy to observe. In Rhodnius the nymphal stages show both numerous plaque bearing sensilla, and a stellular (star shaped) type folding of the cuticle. After ecdysis (moulting) the adult cuticle shows no plaques, few sensilla, and transverse, rather than stellate folds. The typical incomplete metamorphosis of an Exopterygote insect is that seen in Odonata (Dragonsflies) from its aquatic form to its terrestrial form.


The Exopterygote Orders


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Anoplura Sucking Lice DictyopteraCockroaches & Mantids DermapteraEarwigs EmbiopteraWeb-spinners EphemeropteraMayflies GrylloblattodaeRock crawlers HemipteraTrue Bugs IsopteraTermites MallophagaBiting Lice OdonataDragonflies & Damselflies OrthopteraGrasshoppers & Crickets PhasmidaStick Insects PlecopteraStoneflies PsocopteraBooklice ThysanopteraThrips ZorapteraAngel Insects



The Endopteraygotes are also termed the holometabola, these insects exhibit complete metamorphosis with a pupal stage resulting in an imago with no or very little resemblance to the larval stages. These insects are either winged or have lost their wings secondarily. Both the wings and the genitalia develop internally during the larval stages. The Exopterygota division includes what are often termed the "higher insects", such as the beetles, true flies, butterflies, moths, bees, ants and wasps. The term "higher" is used loosely to refer to a more complex life-cycle and morphology, not to indicate that this group is any more successful than the other two divisions, many of which have been in exsistence a great deal longer.

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Megaloptera. Alderflies and hellgrammites Neuroptera. Lacewings and Antlions Coleoptera. Beetles Strepsiptera. Stylopids (no common name) Mecoptera. Scorpion flies Siphonaptera. Fleas Diptera. Flies (True Flies, two winged) Lepidoptera. Butterflies and moth Trichoptera. Caddisflies Hymenoptera. Ants bees wasps ichneumons

© Rob Hutchinson
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