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An Introduction to

Insect World
(Amazing facts about insects)

RASHMI, M.A
Research Scholar
What are insects?
For most of us…..
any small creature crawling /creeping is an insect….
Spider

Centipede

Scorpion

Earthworm

Mites

All these are not insects!!

Millipede
Then what are insects??
Insects
Most dominant of all creatures on
earth

Great Diversity

Highly abundant
in all ecosystems
What is the population size of insects on earth?

?

?
Where do you find them?
Most arid desert
to Evergreen
forests

Sea level to
6000m above
sea level

Artic to Antarctica
Hot sulphur spring (55 0)
to
cold polar habits(-2 0 )

….found Everywhere
What are the Reasons for
Insect Dominance?
Antiquity

200,000 years ago
Modern humans 8-4 million years Bp
Great ape’s

150 -175 million years
Flowering plants

420 million years BP
Collembolans & thysanurans
Oldest hexapodan fossils

575 million years BP
Cambrian explosion

600 million years BP
Protoarthropods

3.2 billion years oldest
unicellular fossils

Earth
6 billion years ago
Great range in their body sizes
Insects demonstrate a great range in their body sizes
However, due to their enormous variation in form it is difficult to
make comparisons

Minute parasitic -Mymar species-0.2mm

Longest insect -555mm Pharnacia serratipes
Female stick insect from west Malaysia
The long horned beetle, Titanus giganteus
Measuring 15 to 20cm in length

Heaviest weighing beetle, Goliathus goliathus
weighing up to 100grams

The largest Indian beetle, Chalcosoma atlas measuring
Up to 7.5cm

Dynastes hercules
measuring15 to 18cm &
weigh up to 88grams.
Queen Alexandra Birdwing
(Ornithoptera alexandrae)
is the largest butterfly in the world,
wing span up to 30cm.

Western pigmy blue from USA
is the smallest butterfly
measures about 1.5cm across the wings
Atlas Moth (Attacus atlas)
Found only in Southeast Asia,
the Atlas Moth is the largest of the moth species with the largest
wing surface area—close to sixty five square inches
& a wingspan of up to a foot long.
Presence of Functional Wings

Birds, Bats- 1 pair of wings (modified fore limbs)
Insects- true wings evolved independent of any limbs
Wings of Insects have developed over a period of 300 million yrs against
pterosaurs 225 m years
Birds 125 m years
Bats 50 m years
Flight provides: Means of escape – Weather
Food
Enemies

Migration in Monarch Butterfly
Can Man Race with Insects??
Human
6.2miles (10Km)
per Hour

6

Mosquito
20miles (32Km)per Hour
2

4
5

3

Sphinx moth
33miles (53Km)
per Hour

Honeybee
13miles
(22Km)per Hour

1

Horsefly
91miles (146Km)
per Hour
Dragonfly
61miles (98Km)
per Hour
Metamorphosis

Life cycle of Insects
Insects undergo metamorphosis for their growth and
development
Metamorphosis in insects is the biological process of
development.
There are two forms of metamorphosis:
Incomplete metamorphosis and
Complete metamorphosis
Nymph

Egg

Adult

Incomplete Metamorphosis
Here u can see how a Dragon fly molting its exoskeleton
Nymph to adult formation

Nymph

Adult
Complete Metamorphosis

Egg

Larvae

Adult
Pupae
Phenological adjustments- facilitating the timing of occurrence of their different stages
What is the life span of insects??

1.Termite Queen - 50
years

5. Bees 4/5 Weeks

2. Queen
Ant 25
years

3. Cicadas 17 years

6.Drone Ants 2 Weeks

4. Dragon flies 4 Months

7.Mayflies 24 HOURS!
Diversity of food habits
Insects exhibit a great diversity of food habits
Fungivory
Necrophagy
Nectarivores & pollen feeders
Phytophagous

Coprophagy
Carnivory
Powder post beetle
they eat virtually everything that is
organic by origin

Detritivory
Exoskeleton
Enormous Reproductive Ability
Decentralized nervous system
Specialized offence and defense mechanisms
Camouflage
Flower mantid

Camo Moth

Dead leaf butterfly
Lichen moth

Dying leaf katydid
How insects see?

Insects have mosaic vision
Compound eyes, contains from 6 to 28,000 or
more light-sensitive structures, called
Ommatidia, grouped under a lens or cornea
that is composed of an equal number of
hexagonal prism-shaped facets.

Compound eye with no. of Ommatidia

Components of Ommatidia
Ultraviolet

Red

Visible spectral range of human and bee
Light production for communication

Glow worm emitting light
Lampyridae is a family of insects in the beetle order Coleoptera. They are
winged beetles, and commonly called fireflies or lightning bugs for their
conspicuous crepuscular use of bioluminescence to attract mates or prey
Synchronous flashing of lights by
Firefly larvae in forest
Magnesium ions & ATP

lanterns (part of their abdomens)
Communication by chemicals

This system is used in finding food,
mates, marking territories, defense,
marking food etc.
Female producing Signal
through chemicals

This system is very specialized & sophisticated

Male having special organ for
sensing the signal
What is the importance of insects to man?
Pests
Pollination

Live stock
Crops
Transmit diseases
Ecosystem functions
Pollination
Energy transfer
Nutrient cycling
Scavenging
Earth moving

Scavenging

Fig wasp

A dung beetle hard at work
Predators & Parasitoids

Adult

Parasitoids
Tricogramma sp

Green lace wing

Adult parasitizing on
Helicoverpa egg

Larvae feeding on aphid

Stalked eggs
Predatory coccinellids

Ground Beetle Attacking
Caterpillar

Cryptolaemus montrozeri
Weed killers

Zygogramma bicolorata

Opuntia- Cactoblastis cactorum

Parthenium weed
Medicinal uses
The venom of honey bees is used to ameliorate inflammatory and
autoimmune conditions such as multiple sclerosis, arthritis, rheumatism,
Maggots have been used to treat abscesses, burns, cellulitis,
gangrene, ulcers.

Model organism- Genetic studies & Evolutionary theories
Gene expression
Genetic recombination
Genetic inheritance
Food Products
Insects are an extremely rich source of high quality proteins, fats, essential
vitamins, and minerals.

Honey, Human food, Pet food, Livestock feed
Secretions and Dyes

Fine fabrics-Silk

Royal jelly
Extends the life span
Treating some bone, joint disorders &
rheumatoid arthrit .
Beeswax
polishing woods, making candles,
packaging, processing, preserving
foods, cigarette filters & waterproofing
material

Shellac

the basic ingredient of a vast list of products,
including stiffening agents in the toes and soles of
shoes and felt hats, shoe polishes, artificial fruits,
lithographic ink, glazes in confections, phonographic
records, playing card finishes, and hair dyes.

Iron gall ink
Oaks produce Aleppo galls in
response to a chemical
substance secreted by
larvae of the cynipid wasp,
Cynips gallae-tinctoriae
Inks

Lac insect
Dactylopius coccus
Dactylopius coccus, used in the preparation of red dye
The insects’ bodies contain the pigment called carminic
acid
Carmine is considered safe enough for use in eye
cosmetics
A significant proportion of the insoluble carmine pigment
produced is used in the cosmetics industry for hair- and
skin-care products, lipsticks, face powders, rouges, and
blushes
A bright red dye and the stain carmine used in
microbiology
The pharmaceutical industry uses cochineal dye to color
pills and ointments
Medical Entomology
Insect are vectors of human diseases
1.Mosquitoes – Malaria, yellow fever & dengue, filariasis,
encephalitis. Mosquitoes are responsible causing the most human deaths
worldwide than any other animal-almost two million annually

Dengue transmitting Mosquito

2. House flies – Dysentery, typhoid, cholera
3. Tsetse flies – African sleeping sickness
4. Horse flies & deer flies – Anthrax
Vector of Malaria
SN: Anopheles quadrimaculatus

Tsetse fly

House flies

horse flies
Forensic entomology
Is the application and study of insect and other arthropod biology to
criminal matters
In murder investigations it deals with which insects eggs when and
where, and in what order they appear in dead bodies

Clothes moth

Insects exhibit a degree of endemism & well-defined phenology
Flies, beetles, mites, moths, wasps, ants &bees.
Flesh fly
Carrion beetle
Hister beetle
Rove beetles
blowfly
Insects have served as excellent models for artisans,
architects, engineers, craftsmen
& designers

Beetle inspired water harvester
Stenocara beetles live in the Namib Desert (southwest coast of Africa), one of the
driest places on Earth (0.4 inches of rain annually) and this beetle has developed a
unique technique to survive by obtaining water from early morning fogs.
The only monument in the world built to honor an
Agricultural Pest

Boll Weevil

Boll Weevil Monument
Top ten reasons to study entomology

10. The Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine has been
awarded to biologists studying insects. How will you know which insect to work on
for your Nobel Prize unless you study insects?

9. Over half of the 2 million species described in the world are insects,
thus there is a certain generality that pertains to all studies of insects.
If you’re interested in biodiversity or ecology you need to study insects.

8. Many physiological processes, such as nutrient specific hunger, are similar in
insects and other animals, but are easier to study in insects.

7. Many serious diseases across the world have insect vectors.
You’ll need to learn insect biology if you want to cure a disease.
6. More species of insect have their genome sequenced than any
other type of multicellular organism. To study the blueprint for life,
insects are a great place to start.
5. Insects have been around for 370 million years and have evolved
solutions to many problems that still confound engineers.
The new field of biomimetic design builds on the
functional morphology of insects.

4. Insects live on all continents. Small flies even live year
round on Antarctica. You can travel the world and work
with insects where ever you go.

3. Students studying insects get in to top graduate schools
or get great jobs

2. Insects affect billions of $$ in agriculture for good as
pollinators and bad as herbivores. Study such insects and you can help society.
1. And the top reason to study
insects is:
Insects are just too cool !
Acknowledgements
Dept of Entomology, UAS, GKVK.

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An Introduction to the Amazing World of Insects

  • 1. An Introduction to Insect World (Amazing facts about insects) RASHMI, M.A Research Scholar
  • 2. What are insects? For most of us….. any small creature crawling /creeping is an insect…. Spider Centipede Scorpion Earthworm Mites All these are not insects!! Millipede
  • 3. Then what are insects??
  • 4. Insects Most dominant of all creatures on earth Great Diversity Highly abundant in all ecosystems
  • 5. What is the population size of insects on earth? ? ?
  • 6. Where do you find them? Most arid desert to Evergreen forests Sea level to 6000m above sea level Artic to Antarctica Hot sulphur spring (55 0) to cold polar habits(-2 0 ) ….found Everywhere
  • 7. What are the Reasons for Insect Dominance?
  • 8. Antiquity 200,000 years ago Modern humans 8-4 million years Bp Great ape’s 150 -175 million years Flowering plants 420 million years BP Collembolans & thysanurans Oldest hexapodan fossils 575 million years BP Cambrian explosion 600 million years BP Protoarthropods 3.2 billion years oldest unicellular fossils Earth 6 billion years ago
  • 9. Great range in their body sizes Insects demonstrate a great range in their body sizes However, due to their enormous variation in form it is difficult to make comparisons Minute parasitic -Mymar species-0.2mm Longest insect -555mm Pharnacia serratipes Female stick insect from west Malaysia
  • 10. The long horned beetle, Titanus giganteus Measuring 15 to 20cm in length Heaviest weighing beetle, Goliathus goliathus weighing up to 100grams The largest Indian beetle, Chalcosoma atlas measuring Up to 7.5cm Dynastes hercules measuring15 to 18cm & weigh up to 88grams.
  • 11. Queen Alexandra Birdwing (Ornithoptera alexandrae) is the largest butterfly in the world, wing span up to 30cm. Western pigmy blue from USA is the smallest butterfly measures about 1.5cm across the wings
  • 12. Atlas Moth (Attacus atlas) Found only in Southeast Asia, the Atlas Moth is the largest of the moth species with the largest wing surface area—close to sixty five square inches & a wingspan of up to a foot long.
  • 13. Presence of Functional Wings Birds, Bats- 1 pair of wings (modified fore limbs) Insects- true wings evolved independent of any limbs Wings of Insects have developed over a period of 300 million yrs against pterosaurs 225 m years Birds 125 m years Bats 50 m years
  • 14. Flight provides: Means of escape – Weather Food Enemies Migration in Monarch Butterfly
  • 15. Can Man Race with Insects?? Human 6.2miles (10Km) per Hour 6 Mosquito 20miles (32Km)per Hour 2 4 5 3 Sphinx moth 33miles (53Km) per Hour Honeybee 13miles (22Km)per Hour 1 Horsefly 91miles (146Km) per Hour Dragonfly 61miles (98Km) per Hour
  • 16. Metamorphosis Life cycle of Insects Insects undergo metamorphosis for their growth and development Metamorphosis in insects is the biological process of development. There are two forms of metamorphosis: Incomplete metamorphosis and Complete metamorphosis
  • 18. Here u can see how a Dragon fly molting its exoskeleton Nymph to adult formation Nymph Adult
  • 20. Phenological adjustments- facilitating the timing of occurrence of their different stages
  • 21. What is the life span of insects?? 1.Termite Queen - 50 years 5. Bees 4/5 Weeks 2. Queen Ant 25 years 3. Cicadas 17 years 6.Drone Ants 2 Weeks 4. Dragon flies 4 Months 7.Mayflies 24 HOURS!
  • 22. Diversity of food habits Insects exhibit a great diversity of food habits Fungivory Necrophagy Nectarivores & pollen feeders Phytophagous Coprophagy Carnivory Powder post beetle they eat virtually everything that is organic by origin Detritivory
  • 24. Specialized offence and defense mechanisms
  • 26. Flower mantid Camo Moth Dead leaf butterfly Lichen moth Dying leaf katydid
  • 27. How insects see? Insects have mosaic vision
  • 28. Compound eyes, contains from 6 to 28,000 or more light-sensitive structures, called Ommatidia, grouped under a lens or cornea that is composed of an equal number of hexagonal prism-shaped facets. Compound eye with no. of Ommatidia Components of Ommatidia
  • 30. Light production for communication Glow worm emitting light Lampyridae is a family of insects in the beetle order Coleoptera. They are winged beetles, and commonly called fireflies or lightning bugs for their conspicuous crepuscular use of bioluminescence to attract mates or prey
  • 31. Synchronous flashing of lights by Firefly larvae in forest
  • 32. Magnesium ions & ATP lanterns (part of their abdomens)
  • 33. Communication by chemicals This system is used in finding food, mates, marking territories, defense, marking food etc. Female producing Signal through chemicals This system is very specialized & sophisticated Male having special organ for sensing the signal
  • 34. What is the importance of insects to man? Pests Pollination Live stock Crops Transmit diseases Ecosystem functions Pollination Energy transfer Nutrient cycling Scavenging Earth moving Scavenging Fig wasp A dung beetle hard at work
  • 35. Predators & Parasitoids Adult Parasitoids Tricogramma sp Green lace wing Adult parasitizing on Helicoverpa egg Larvae feeding on aphid Stalked eggs Predatory coccinellids Ground Beetle Attacking Caterpillar Cryptolaemus montrozeri
  • 36. Weed killers Zygogramma bicolorata Opuntia- Cactoblastis cactorum Parthenium weed
  • 37. Medicinal uses The venom of honey bees is used to ameliorate inflammatory and autoimmune conditions such as multiple sclerosis, arthritis, rheumatism, Maggots have been used to treat abscesses, burns, cellulitis, gangrene, ulcers. Model organism- Genetic studies & Evolutionary theories Gene expression Genetic recombination Genetic inheritance
  • 38. Food Products Insects are an extremely rich source of high quality proteins, fats, essential vitamins, and minerals. Honey, Human food, Pet food, Livestock feed Secretions and Dyes Fine fabrics-Silk Royal jelly Extends the life span Treating some bone, joint disorders & rheumatoid arthrit .
  • 39. Beeswax polishing woods, making candles, packaging, processing, preserving foods, cigarette filters & waterproofing material Shellac the basic ingredient of a vast list of products, including stiffening agents in the toes and soles of shoes and felt hats, shoe polishes, artificial fruits, lithographic ink, glazes in confections, phonographic records, playing card finishes, and hair dyes. Iron gall ink Oaks produce Aleppo galls in response to a chemical substance secreted by larvae of the cynipid wasp, Cynips gallae-tinctoriae Inks Lac insect
  • 40. Dactylopius coccus Dactylopius coccus, used in the preparation of red dye The insects’ bodies contain the pigment called carminic acid Carmine is considered safe enough for use in eye cosmetics A significant proportion of the insoluble carmine pigment produced is used in the cosmetics industry for hair- and skin-care products, lipsticks, face powders, rouges, and blushes A bright red dye and the stain carmine used in microbiology The pharmaceutical industry uses cochineal dye to color pills and ointments
  • 41. Medical Entomology Insect are vectors of human diseases 1.Mosquitoes – Malaria, yellow fever & dengue, filariasis, encephalitis. Mosquitoes are responsible causing the most human deaths worldwide than any other animal-almost two million annually Dengue transmitting Mosquito 2. House flies – Dysentery, typhoid, cholera 3. Tsetse flies – African sleeping sickness 4. Horse flies & deer flies – Anthrax Vector of Malaria SN: Anopheles quadrimaculatus Tsetse fly House flies horse flies
  • 42. Forensic entomology Is the application and study of insect and other arthropod biology to criminal matters In murder investigations it deals with which insects eggs when and where, and in what order they appear in dead bodies Clothes moth Insects exhibit a degree of endemism & well-defined phenology Flies, beetles, mites, moths, wasps, ants &bees. Flesh fly Carrion beetle Hister beetle Rove beetles blowfly
  • 43. Insects have served as excellent models for artisans, architects, engineers, craftsmen & designers Beetle inspired water harvester Stenocara beetles live in the Namib Desert (southwest coast of Africa), one of the driest places on Earth (0.4 inches of rain annually) and this beetle has developed a unique technique to survive by obtaining water from early morning fogs.
  • 44. The only monument in the world built to honor an Agricultural Pest Boll Weevil Boll Weevil Monument
  • 45. Top ten reasons to study entomology 10. The Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine has been awarded to biologists studying insects. How will you know which insect to work on for your Nobel Prize unless you study insects? 9. Over half of the 2 million species described in the world are insects, thus there is a certain generality that pertains to all studies of insects. If you’re interested in biodiversity or ecology you need to study insects. 8. Many physiological processes, such as nutrient specific hunger, are similar in insects and other animals, but are easier to study in insects. 7. Many serious diseases across the world have insect vectors. You’ll need to learn insect biology if you want to cure a disease.
  • 46. 6. More species of insect have their genome sequenced than any other type of multicellular organism. To study the blueprint for life, insects are a great place to start. 5. Insects have been around for 370 million years and have evolved solutions to many problems that still confound engineers. The new field of biomimetic design builds on the functional morphology of insects. 4. Insects live on all continents. Small flies even live year round on Antarctica. You can travel the world and work with insects where ever you go. 3. Students studying insects get in to top graduate schools or get great jobs 2. Insects affect billions of $$ in agriculture for good as pollinators and bad as herbivores. Study such insects and you can help society.
  • 47. 1. And the top reason to study insects is: Insects are just too cool !