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PROGRAM SCRIPT:

INVERTEBRATES

First station:
.
1 What can you tell me about insects? They have 3 body parts: head, thorax and
abdomen; an exoskeleton; 3 pairs of jointed legs (6 legs); and most adults have 2
pairs of wings (4 wings).
Head: one pair of segmented antennae, a pair of compound eyes and usually two
or three simple eyes, and mouth parts (ex: fly has sucker mouth, mosquito has
needle-like, grasshoppers grasp like pliers, butterflies and moths have a roll-up
straw like a party favor.
Thorax: made up of 3 segments, each with a pair of legs attached. The second and
third segments each also have a pair of wings ·attached.
Abdomen: usually has eleven segments; the spiracles are on the abdomen,
openings through which air passes for respiration.
Most insects go through 4 life stages:
The first is the egg. The next is the larva--the worm-like or caterpillars--these
mostly just serve as a feeding stage to prepare for the long metamorphosis (a few
days to a few months). The third stage is the pupa--the cocoon or dormant stage---
in this stage the insect goes through metamorphosis, it changes form. In butterflies,
the cocoon is called a chrysalis (plural is chrysalids). The cocoon or chrysalis is
the covering that surrounds the pupa. The last stage is the adult. This is the most
active phase including honey production in honey bees, nest building in wasps,

v and reproduction in all insects.


There are nearly 700,000 described species of insects in the world. That is more
than twice the number of all other animals andplants combined. Insects are
adapted to virually every kind of habitat.
Relatives of insects:
Crustaceans---crabs, lobster, crayfish, shrimp
Diplopoda---millipedes
Chilopods---centipedes
Arachnids---spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites

Second station:
Discuss bees on the way to VP and while looking at bees in hive. See attached
bee info.
Give each kid a magnifying glass and mealworm larva
-have them look at body segments
-show pupa stage, or if time one to each
-pick up larvae (if not already done) or pupae
-give mealy bugs (beetles) and have them Ld. head, thorax and abdomen,
six legs, two antennae
pick up beetles

Third station:
Collect invertes in and around main pond, Ld. as much as possible.
If this station is rained out, visit Small Wonders and note black widow, tarantula,
centipede.

-- --.-.....
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
INVERTEBRATES

Part I Basis for Programs


Title: Secret Life of Arthropods
Course Description: Examine some live critters without backbones and
learn about how these extraordinary creatures with jointed legs and
an exoskeleton have colonized almost every habitat on our planet.
We will discuss unique and "out of sight" life styles and adaptations
of different specimens.
Age Level: Grade 3-6
Time: 1 hour
Goal: Participants wilileam the unique characteristics of arthropods, their ~
adaptations and the niches they fill in the environment.

Part II Instructional Plan


Course Outline: Three 20 minute sessions:
1st: Program box---parts of insects and their life cycles; other
arthropods.
2nd: Bugs and bees---hold meal worm stages and watch/discuss
bees at VP.
3rd: Tour of Small Wonders and pond walk to find invertes in and
near the pond.

Part III Resource Support - ./

Site Needs: At least one classroom.


Participant Thresholds: No more than 15 kids per instructor up to 45 kids.
Transportation Needs: Not a good program for outreach.
Resource Needs: Invertes program box
Enough meal worms, pupae, and adults for @ kid
Enough magnifying glasses for @ kid
Enough nets for @ kid and some jars

~--
/

Organs for Moving--Insects have different types of feet for swimming or


walking. Some, like mes and bees, have sticky pads and hooks on their feet.
Insects move on a series of tripods-they move front and rear legs on one side of
the body and the middle leg on the other side of the body.
The wings of the insect move in a figure eight pattern.Some insects, like
flies, have two wings. Dragonflies have four wings, and other insects have no
wings at all.

Senses-Insects have both simple and complex eyes. The insect's sense of smell
is usually located on the antennae in olfactory pits or cones. The sense of taste is
usually around the mouth or sometimes in the lower part of the legs. Some
insects have no sense of hearing,but others have hearing organs on various parts
of their bodies-katydids have ears on their legs, and locusts hfive ears on the
sides of their bodies.
Insects have small spines on their bodies which allow them to feel
nearness to objects around them. Some insects have heat detectors which help
them find endothermic prey.

u Arachnids

The class Arachnida conSists of spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions and daddy
longlegs (harvestmen). Arachnids have no wings. They have two body parts--
the cephalothorax and the abdomen. Arachnids have one to six pair of simple
eyes-no compound eyes. The respiration of arachnids is varied. Some have air
tubes, some have breathing organs somewhat like lungs called ''book lungs"--
small sacs within the abdomen connected to the outer air by small openings.
The cephalothorax of the arachnids contain the eyes, mouth, and "motor
box". The abdomen of the arachnids contain the digestive system, respiratory
system, heart, reproductive organs, and in the case of spiders, spinning organs.
Spiders
Spiders have two pair of mandibles. The first pair end in poisonous fangs
for killing prey. The eight legs of the spider end in claws. In front of the claws
are the palpi-feelers.
Spiders have three pairs of spinnerets. Spider spin webs with silk. They
coat their legs with an oily substance from their mouths so they can walk over
their own webs.
Females usually spin the webs and catch food. The males are smaller. The
palpi of the males are used to fertiliie the female. The female lays eggs in a silky
sac.Some mothers open sacs, some die when they lay their eggs, some spider
young stay in their egg sacs until they are old enough to make their own webs
u and capture insects. Some spiders live one year, others live two years or more.
Arthropods: Background Information

Arthropods are in the Kingdom AnimaIia, Phylum Arthropoda (meaning


"having jointed feet"). Arthropods make up 3/4 of the Earth's animal
population. They have jointed feet and bodies. Arthropods have "exoskeletons"
made of chitin. Arthropods must molt to grow. Nearly all arthropods have a
heart and blood system and a well-organized nervous system.
The groups of arthropods are:
Insects
Arachnids--mites, ticks, spiders, scorpions
Crustaceans-- crabs, lobsters, shrimp, barnacles
Chilopods--centipedes
Oi plopods--milli pedes

Insects

Insects are in the class Hexapoda (six legs). Insects are the largest group
of arthropods. More than 800,000 kinds of insects have been named.
Entomologists believe that there may be as many as 2-4 million species, with
billions of individuals within each species. Scientists estimate insects to be about
200,000 years older than humans.
The jointed body of the insect has three body parts:
Head--contains the brain, antennae, eyes (both simple and complex-the simple
eyes are light sensing organs called ocelli), and mouth
Thorax--muscles for flying, walking, swimming--legs and wings are attached to
. the thorax
Abdomen-digestive, reproductive, excretory organs, spiracles for respiration

Outer Body--The outer body of the insect is made of chitin. The muscles are
attached to the inside of Th. exoskeleton. The insect, like other arthropods, must
shed its exoskeleton in order to grow. The period between molts is called
"instar".

Internal Organs--The heart of the insect is located in the abdomen. The heart
pumps blood, which can be yellow, green, or colorless. The nervous system of
the insect is a simple system of ganglia (paired nerve cords) which run down the
underside of the body. Some ganglion are capable of functioning alone-
therefore some insects with no heads can continue to walk.

--
; A\. \CA ST\C\ \IV n
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Insects and Relatives • 1
u Why Care About Insects?

Insects are incredibly successful


With around a million named species, and maybe several times that many unnamed and
unknown, insects are the large majority of anima] species on earth. They have colonized
almost every possible terrestrial and freshwater niche. Almost any substance with any
nutritive value is eaten by some group of insects.

Insects are important to Biology


Study of the huge variability of insects in lifestyle, behavior, social evolution, mating
behavior, and parental investment has greatly advanced our understanding of
evolutionary biology. Insects are ideal research subjects for genetics, developmep.t, and ""
molecular biology as well.. "

Insects are old


Arthropods appear in terrestrial fossils by 400 million years ago. Insects are present by
350 million years ago, and were flying by 300 million years ago. When the first
amphibians lived on land, insects were already there. Most modem groups of plants and
anirna1s evolved in close association with insects, and have adapted to them in important
ways.

u Insects are our best friends and worst enemies


We often think of insects in negative terms. They feed on our crops, suck our blood,
contaminate our homes, and 1ransmit terrible diseases. The mosquito is arguably the
most dangerous anjmal in the world to humans. "

However, without insects, the world we know could not exist. Some important
contributions of insects include:
• They pollinate m~y, perhaps most, higher plants. Most of our fruit and vegetable
crops and most other flowering plants could not exist without them
• Termites, in.particular, are "a vital part of the terrestrial carbon and nitrogen
cycles. Without them, dead plants would decompose only slowly
• Ants turn over and help create more soil than earthworms
• They are a vital food source for many other animals
• They control populations of other insects and invertebrates
• They provide some products directly (silk, shellac, honey, etc.).

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insects and Reiatives - 2

Phylum Arthropoda

Arthropods are an incredibly diverse group, with far more species than all the other phyla
combined. All arthropods have several features in common, including:

1. Segmented bodies, both internally and externally


2. Some segments fus~d into body regions (tagmata)
3. Exoskeletons made of chitin, along with other proteins, waxes, and calcium
carbonate
4. Body segments have pairs ofjointed appendages, which are specialized for
feeding, locomotion, sensing, etc.
5. Growth occurs by inolting (ecdysis) - kev~ _ .
6. Compound eyes plus one to several simple eyes bz.vf ci'" ~de. ,(,;~~I'\.I.
7. Breathing occurs through gills, tracheae, or book hmgs I " ~ fs -I!u s?R-
8. Nervous system has a "brain" or cerebral gan~on, connected to a pair of
ventral nerve cords with addition8.1 ganglia aece.dnl;r
Major groups of Arthropods
There is some disagreement about the exact relationships of arthropods, but this is a
popular scheme. I have left out several minor classes.

Subphylum. Chelicerata
• Class Meristomata (horseshoe crabs)
• Class Pycnogonida (sea spiders) ~ It.t'., ~ ':
• Class Arachnida (spiders, sco;rpions, ticks, mites) - 2500 spiders, 30,000 ticks & mites .f.?lo&~ So I ~Jr

Subphylum Crustacea -about 30,000 species identified


• Class Brachiopoda (fairy shrimp, water fleas, brine shrimp)
• Class Maxillopoda (ostrocods, copepods, barnacles)
.. Class Malacostraca (pill bugs, krill, crabs, shrimp, lobsters)

Subphylum UnUmnia
• Class Chilopoda (centipedes)
• Class Diplopoda (millipedes)
• Class Insecta - about 1 million species known
Insects and Relatives • 3

u Key for Classifying Common Arthropods

1a. Two pairs of antennae (one may be greatly reduced), variable number of legs
Class Crustacea, 2
1 b. One pair of antennae or none go to 3

2a. Two body regions (cephalothorax, abdomen), 5 pairs of legs Order Decopoda
(crayfish, lobsters, shrimp)
2b. Three body regions (head, thorax, abdomen), 7 pairs of legs Order Isopoda
(marine isopods, sowbugs, pill bugs)

3a. No antennae, two body regions (cephalothorax, abdomen), 4 pairs of legs


.. Class Arachnida
(spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions)
3b. One pair antennae go to 4

. 4a. Three body regions (head, thorax, abdomen), 3 pairs of legs, may have wings
Class Insecta
4b. Two body regions (head, trunk) go to 5
u 5a. One parr of legs per trunk segment Class Chilopoda
(centipedes)
5b. Two pairs of legs per trunk segment Class Diplopoda
(millipedes)

u
insects and Relatives - 4

Class Insecta

~ Insect Characteristics Jf
I, Three body regions (head, thorax, abdomen)
2. Pair of compound eyes, plus (usually) three simple eyes on the head
3, Pair of antennae on the head
4, Varied and adapted mouthparts, derived from a labrum, a pair of mandibles, a pair
of maxilla, and a labia
5. Three pairs of walking legs (s61",etimts JUS} fu boJa.nce,)
6, TWQ pairs of wings, derived not from limbs, but from outgrowths of the body wall
"".'AIp~ '#Vl4""'~ 'I'\~~ ( . 1. __ ,1
"1I~Pllc:S, I.et:9.s 'hnl=. H.u. ;; -h . 9'er~tc l"OIep~,""IJ'1
• I
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Important Advan~ges ot Insec s 0
• Extreme adaptability
• Small size
• Flight
• Complete Metamorphosis

Life Cycles of Insects

Simple Metamorphosis ,,'


Example: silverfish. The juveniles are essentially miniature adults, having
the same lifestyle.

Incomplete Metamorphosis
Examples: dragonflies, cicadas. The juveniles (nymphs) are somewhat
like the adult, but have important differences and lead a different lifestyle,

Complete MeUUnorphosis
The juveniles (larvae) are very different from the adults and have a very
different lifestyle. When the larval stage is done, the insect goes through a
second phase of embryonic-type development (the pupa) and emerges as
an adult. This adaptation has been very successful, and about 88% of
known insect species have a complete metamoxphosis. J_ A~ .

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.hI \J ve5~'
Wh~ ~x~ 'n5e~tS 5D SlACtessv:\ _. , ("')
• ve.n:1 5Mo-.H) SffiClU Iuc.h.e ) sma.,L\ o.\~-t · .Of e»\~'1 tu <;U\VI Ve-
"me-mmorj>l\,iS1'S tUAuu.l~ +h6fY\ til /A)e 1I11nG'lA.5 fesUUfces
- t\.cA tl btA- }Ji IA· ty
insects and Relatives· 5

Class Insecta

The Big Four: the most successful Orders

Order Coeloptera (beetles) Ya.( MA~li~


.s{>ec,ies. 1d~1'\~f\eJ./I"\o.-i\~cI
Name means "sheath-winged". elI bIg adaptatlon IS Wing covers.
There are over 250,000 named sp cies. ~
_~5 ~~
Order Lepidoptera (butterniei and mols) \60,000 spec.i6 flo--t-I\~d
The name means "scaly-winged". There are about 150,000 named specles.

Order Hymenoptera (ants, bees, llnp. wasps) \20.000 ,",e0M.ec\ C 5000. \ \ '(\'seeks )
elLn <The name means "membrane-Winged". There are about 120,000 named species, of
) W~t which the majority are ants. These insects determine gender by _~plodil?loidy. _./ "fr - ~ ~~
)<;e _ s;~~ ~ b'1l 3h! ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ J:D sls.Jer.s ~ -It. ~~ ..
O-$Vrw"~ .,."-.~II~m -~" (t\,iVlS\oY\S ~ 'o...hD"l) ~ VJc,\<.)\Ctl\\l1- {~~ s ~S t.-0\r\ ~
l"WAJ Order JJlptera (true flies) -t~evj d("e SDG\.tiL ~
~t\t. Order includes gnats, flies, and mosquitoes. The name means ''two wings", because
these insects do not have a second pair of wings; the second pair have evolved into
halteres. There are over 90,000 named species.

Other Major Orders of Insects


There are many other kinds of insects, and not everyone agrees on how to classify them. For
example, some sources put termites under Isoptera and group mantids and roaches with
Orthoptera. I present one version here, but not a definitive one. I have left out several minor
unfamiliar orders. '
Order Neuroptera (lacewings, ant lions, dobsonflies, etc.)
Order Mecoptera (scorpionflies)
Order Siphonaptera (fleas)
Order Trichoptera (caddisflies)
Order Anoplura (sucking-lice)
Order Hemiptera (true bugs and relatives)
Order Mallophaga (biting lice, bird -lice)
Order Psocoptera (book lice, bark lice)
Order Homoptera (white flies, aphids, scale insects, cicadas)
Order Thysanoptera (thrips)
Order Orthoptera (crickets, grasshoppers, locusts)
Order Dictyoptera (termites, manticis, cockroaches)
Order Dennaptera (earwigs)
'Order Plecoptera (stoneflies)
Order Ephemeroptera (mayflies)
Order Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies)
Order Phasmida (walking sticks and leaf insects)
Order Thysanura (bristletails, silverfish)
Order Collembola (snow flies and springtails)
)
Or- &\~ r '1y\'\\e ll\.O £\t:Ka...,

SpeC,I-t<; ,breed . 11\1/ ~ i bb 1i ~15 ole.-penoli t)~ /YYl MIN -1'\'] e,


CAJ'\ (JY\i \'\ dUl \\~.. S:lm'\e h f\'\e s -t\\e Queen bee Iotti? \ eS
~o Ott ~ stan: I'\e-w u>\lrV\~. SuiV\e,h~V\es NOI.
·NGOMPLETE (I
METAMORPHOSIS COMPLETE FOUR COMMON INSECTS
METAMORPHOSIS OF THE POND

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.. :..

EGGS EGG I>


L

4JIIJIIt 'r;: .


YOUNG NYMPH
:::;::: ,

LARVA, (CATERPILLAR)
§:..¥'
~k~
r.
....~.

."~' :
~".

,,~ ADULT DRAGONFLY

MAYFLY LARVA
ADULT MAYFLY

,;' DRAGONFLY LARVA


,,'
,';
The adult mayjly has a shi".,! hod."1 with
>:~:;. The dragonfly and damseljly are similar two or three conspiclious tai/ fila""mls,
in that bolk have two pairs of large, often longer than ils bOlly. lis Irans/Jar-
'.:',
filmy wings, shorl antennae and long ent, veined wings have mort of a hut-
bodies. But the damselfly's body is gen- terfly than a drago'!fly shape. The ma,:tI?'1
~~\:.
LATER NYMPH :t:.::: erally thinner and it can close ils wings yowg is aquatic, lilce the olher ".'Imphs
j: over its back when at resl, Dragor!/lies on these pages, Imt is distingllished by
#.: ...
invariably keep their wings out jlat in the gills along its abdomen. 71Ie molh/ike
CHRYSALIS (PUPA)
the position shown above, and are strong- caddisjiy adult has long antennae, chew-
er, faster .fliers_Its bulging eyes meel ing moulh paris and fOllr wings which
;;:.' each other on top oj the head. The young, fold over ,ils body. lis larval life is UJ'uol-
~,,:

too, are similar, hut the damselfly nymph ('I pQSJ'ed in a prolective casing /)/ debris.
has Ihree finlike gills attached to its tail.

ADULT
ADULT
{I; "/,,,,, il Irm'f..f Iht. ,:g,g, all illJt'ti li'-
I
JI.'III ·/,'1 lilt! {ulllil /;11'111 il will II/lima/til' If the egg yields an inseel form which is'" '..
a,nl ,'t', tlllt! ~/ it gmh'J "I' wi/Illmi Jim',,:. mt;rely different from the final adult, and ' ,
illg :':!ilt~!J/1 II 1IIIIIflI, ",. rrJlu~lJ. ,'/((g/!, il if this laroa must pass through a pupal ' ADUlTCADDISFLY ~
is "'(11./ /" I,,' lfI"/I'rg";'~1J ;".."",pldl~ /II,.lfI- stage, perhaps in a cocoon, then the spe-"
1Il1ll/'h,/.I'i.r, '/7,,: //fIr/I'lI',ill c'ab/Ja.gt' 11I~!f ,ies is characleri~ed by complete meta-
ullll/'", II ~/illk bllg, ;,1' ,1"11(11 (Ill ill,I"'tl, ..11- morph'lJiis. The painted lady bUllerjly
lllllll~" il,l "II(~I' 1II(1/'ki/~gJ' dUlIlgc' ,l'ligh'~)' shown here is first a caterpillar and then ' ADULT DAMSELFLY
lI.f ;1/':IJJ/',I'II'I'11I1,1,:h J""/'mll~I'II/I)11lI1 111/1/1.1', a chrysalis before becoming the ck/icate
lIIlIl '''llllIlIgll i/.lil/t//~I' ,gl'l.l' If'il~gl'. il iJ t',\,-
,fflllltllll'l'
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J""""'" il,I'I(lJ'I"t/ (lui
.
III hI',
adull creature which in no way resembles
Ihe slow-moving, segmented calerpillar, ',":~,.
not even in its habits Dr food preferences.' ' ..
,
) DAMSELFLY LARVA
LARVA
INCASINR
'l "ADDISH Y
/I

INSECT MOUTH PARTS

BITING AND CHEWING


(GRASSHOPPER)
A WORKSHOP OF lEGS ~ 13(A.~b'e. Bees &I

ha..\J (J, "\:t)D \ 'Do'/. es


(5'\ ~.e-\c \.e'j <; •
; .

lJeveAq>ec\ftJf
dAff· \\Vi\\C)
,
1
eundit\on~.
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l :"
~ ... : ~f'IERCING AND SUCKING
, . (MOSQUITO)
5· '.
!:~.~.:...

fr':
it:·
CHEWING AND LAPPING
(HONEY BEE)
ANTENNA
CLEANER

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~~: ..
~;/l:.:,:.
·;1t~·\·
Em COMB
Each pair of a bee's legs performs a spe-
};!';. SPONGING cial junction. The rear Jegs scrap! pollen
1-1'.
(HOUSEFLy)
from each other and deposit it on pollen
.~;:. baskets ( sluu.kd in green at top). The stiff
~;" hairs of the middle legs brurh pollen from
the thorax and front legs. Tht sharp little
spur ( in green, center) removes wax from
Although the mouth parts of insects are wax glands on the abdomen. Each front
superficially dissimilar, theJ' have all de- leg has bTanthed,feathery hairs for collect-
veloped and bun modified from the same ing pollen. It also has a special joint ( en-
origiTUlI plan-still retained by insects largement, bottom) with a comb JOT clean-
like the grasshopper. Essentiall)·, these ing the e.:),ts! and a hairlined notch through
mouth parts consist of a labrum, or upper which antennae are drawn JOT cleaning.
lip (7); a labium, or lower liPJ2),: and
two pairs of h'?"kontal(,· lC'orkmg Jaws:
the mandibles (3) and the maxillae (4).
Austin Nature Center
Honey Bee Facts

BODY PARTS
u Head:
The bee has 3 body parts: head, thorax and abdomen. (The head has 5
eyes- 3 simple eyes on the top and 2 compound eyes on the front). The
antennae have tiny plates on the end which provide a keen sense of smell.
The mouth of the honey bee consists of a tongue which is actually an
underlip rolled into a slender tube, and jaws. The tongue has a bristly pad
on the end, which is used to collect nectar. Once collected,the nectar goes
to a special stomach called a "honey bag". This is the frist step in the
production of honey. When the bee returns to the hive with the nectar that
it has collected from plants, it places the nectar in storage cells where
the process of turning nectar into honey is completed. The jaws are used
to shape wax for making honeycombs.
Thorax:
The wings and legs of the honey bee are located on the thorax. The
wings are moved over 12,000 times per minutes by powerful muscles
which enable the bee to carry loads heavier than itself. The bee has 6
legs which are covered with tiny hair-like bristles. Pollen is attached to
the bristles as the bee collects nectar. Some of the pollen is brushed off
onto other flowers. This causes pollination, enabling flowers to ripen
seeds. Most of the pollen is carried back to the hive on openings in the
hind legs called "pollen baskets·.
Abdomen:
The abdomen has scales called wax plates which collect the wax
the bees produce from their own bodies. This wax is used by the worker
bees to build the hive. The stinger is located at the rear of the abdomen.
The worker beels stinger has a barbed end which becomes lodged in the
animal that it stings. When the worker bee stings, it dies. The queen bee
has a straight stinger and she can sting without dying. She uses her
stinger to kill rival queens. Drones have no stinger.

LIFECVCLES
All bees begin life as eggs laid by the queen. The queen lays 1 ,000
to 2,000 eggs per day in !tbrood combs·. Brood combs are in a part of the
hive set aside as a nursery. Each egg is laid in a cell made of wax. The
cells are sealed with beeswax.. The worker bee cells are the smallest in
the hive, the drones are medium sized and the queen cells are the largest.
The bee larvae hatches in 3 days. The worker bees feed the larvae as
many as 1,000 meals a day. All larvae are fed "royal jellyl' at first. Royal
jelly is produced in glands in young worker beesl heads. After 2 or 3 days,
worker bee larvae are shifted to a diet of ·bee-bread", a mixture of honey
and pollen. Queen larvae are fed royal jelly throughout the larval stage.
The wormlike larvae covers itself with silky fibers to form a
cocoon. The body of the larvae forms into the shape of the adult bee. The
adult queen bee hatches in 7 days. The adult worker hatches in 21 days
and the adult drone in 24 days.
Queen:
Larvae which grow in the largest brood cells are fed a constant diet
of royal jelly. These larvae become the queen larvae. The old queen
attemps to sting and kill her rival daughters. The worker bees allow this
if the queen is not too old. If the queen workers decide that the queen is
too old, they press around her until she dies. The queen is always attended
by 10-15 worker bees. The young worker bees feed and stroke her
to encourage her to lay eggs.
A queen bee lives 4 to 5 years. She mates once with a drone and then
lays eggs for the rest of her life. The young queen who is the first to
leave her cell stings the other young ones to death. She then flies out of
the hive and mates with one of the drones.
Workers:
In a hive of 10,000 bees, about 9,500 are workers. They are female
bees and they rule the hive. They never stop working until they die. They
live for different lengths of time depending on when they are born. If they
are born during a busy time for the hive, they work themselves to death in
2 or 3 months. If they are born in the fall, they usually live to be 8 or 9
months old.
A woker bee has different jobs at different times in her life. First
she feeds the larvae and pupae. Next she guards the hive entrance. She
also beats air rapidly with her wings to cool the hive and keep the air
fresh. Finally the bee begins to gather nectar and pollen. A worker bee
does a upollen danceu in the hive to sign~1 the other bees the location of a
patch of flowers.
Drones:
The male bees are called drones. They do no work in the hive. One
drone mates. with the queen, then dies. The other drones are allowed to
stay in the hive if the hive is doing well. Before winter comes, the
workers drive out the drones and sting them to death if necessary. If the
drones find no other hive to welcome them, they starve or freeze to death.

VALUE OF THE HONEY BEE


Honey bees are extremely valuable insects to humans. Most live in
man-made hives. Escaped swarms usually nest in hollow trees. They are
valuable for the honey and wax they produce, but especially for their jobs
as pollinators. The yield of crops such as orchard fruits and clover seeds
can be greatly increased by introducing hives of honey bees into orchards. 0
compiled by Sherry Winriette 10/93
Picture Glossarv ~

u How Bugs Grow


SIAtIPLE METAMORl)HOSIS
E~aa:lplt' Silverfish

o
!'gg

.... -.
--------~~~~------~-­
n)'1nph stages
INC()MPLETE illT:~10RPHOSIS
Examplt: Dragonfly

I.ldult
egg

aquatic n·ymph.
or naiad

COMPLETE ME1:l\.L\tlC)RPHOSIS
.Exampl::: H('llsetly

o
egg
PUp~7:':!lnf

,·J'oJd.s
pup,,))

u ;.ldllit

. 36 .
lUre Glossary

, Examples of Growth Stages


THE EGG AND EGG CASE

(holds 21-2.J eggs)

Lace1.£.'ing Fleu Apple Aphid GernZLl17 Cockroacb ( :itrlts Red Mite


egg case

LARVA Larvae of some flies are MAGGOTS

Salt-marsh
Mosquito LanlQ H ouset7,)' Maggot

Larvae of beetles are GRUBS LarVae of buttertlies and rnoths


are CATERPILbARS

BL71zded Woo/lybear
LuTlJc1 olIsabell'1 Tiger M Of"
Japanese Beetle Grub

. 38 .
Ie Glossary

NYMPH-loo~s like adult, NAIAD-The early growth of some insects


u only smaller takes place in water. At that stage, the insect
is caIJed a naiad or aquatic nymph.

Dragonfl~' Naiad

Cockro.:1ch Nymph
u

PUPA-middle stage of growing COCOON-a case made of silken


insect or bug threads that holds the growing insect

Apple Maggot
Banded Wooll

· 39 .
o

n
u . ~ uert: IS 5t11l much disa~e('ml"nt amung entoDlolo-
~Ists as to the exact numbc.-r of urders amon~ insects.
jaws. they do considerable damage. They include such
dt'Structi,·e ~sts as the boll wee"'il and the Colorado
potato 1>«11('.
Slrepsip""" The nallll' uf this oruer indicates that these
inst'Cts arc: characterized as IU·IS/rtf u·in.~s. The order i!
Some scientists list as many as thiny-scven separate small and consists of tiny parasitic insects which pre~
of' orders. Others go to the opposite extreme and list fewer largely upon wasps and ~'arious members of the Homop.
than twenty-five ·orders. The orders given below include Ina order.
Thysanaptera. These jringt wings are the thrips. They
all the major groups of insectS. Most of the disagreement are the enemies of e\'ery gardener. In spite of their
occurs about th~ less important orders. The orders below minute size. they cause plants to wilt because they attack
include insectS the 'average person never \...·m see. in large numbers. .
Yuu will notice that manv of the order names md in Hemiptera. The true bugs bdong to this order. Thev
-p!tra. Thi~ is the Gre~k for wings. The (orm of the have sharp braks and suck sap from plants, thus often
wlOgs proVides a key to the differences between many becoming major agricultural pests. rhe wings of the
insects in this order fold flat over the back and are haH
o( the orders. The main orders of the insects beginning clear and half doudy looking, thus justifyi~g the scien-
with the most primitive and progressing to the most tific name, which indicates they are the hal] wings.
complete are listed under separate headings below. Homoptera. The cicadas, aphids, froghoppers, lantern
flies, leaf hoppen, and tree hoppers belong to this order.
Thy.anura. The name means jringtlails. This order in- They, too, suck sap through sharp litde sucking spears.
cludes the bristle tails, the silverfish, and the fircbrats. But they hold their wings differently from the bugs of
They are soft, tiny, wingless insects rarely found except the Hnniptna order. They hold them at an :mgle, 10
among old papers and under rubbish. The silverfish, that they look like a peaked roof, instead of folding
often found in households. is said to be the oldest insect them 8at over their backs.
on earth. Neuroptera. These, the nmJt-w;nged insects, include the
Collembola. These are tiny and light in weight. Many Dobson flies, the alder flies, the ant lions, and the
of them, called springlails, hurl themselves into the air by familiar green lacewings of summer gardens. The lace-
means of tails which are pressed suddenly against the wings, particularly, are beneficial because they destror
~round or surface film of the water to shoot the wingless
aphids. The young lacewing flies are so active in devour- '
creatures on long jumps. Some of the springtails are ing the plant lice that they are known generally.,
known as snow jltas because thev appear while snow is "aphis lions."
on the ground, sometimes bv the thousand.
Corradentla. These tiny insects are very abundant. ~ ;
Plecoplera. The stoneflies' belong to this order. Like
~orrodCDtia are. the gnawing insects and include IUds !
the nymphs of the dragonflies and the mayflies, the msects as book bce. ,.
immature stonefties live bt:neath the water, breathing Trichaptera. This order comprises the caddis ftiea. fa
throu~h gills. They sometimes emerge as adults very
early m the spring, thus gaining one of their commOD their immature stages they live underwater. The tan.
mak~ cases of waste material in which they live. Same :

u names: snowjiiu.
Eph~merida. Th.e. order-name of these insects, the
~ay flIes, means IIInng jor a day. Some May flies actually
~Ie on the day they appear, and all are extremely short
species construct underwater nets among pebbles ... :
feed on the water-borne particles which are carried '
into them.
Lepidoptera. All the butterflies and the moths c:amr '
lived. They mat~, t~e females lay the eggs in the water, under this heading. The order n.ame means they are tbr :
a.nd then the bnef bfe of the adults is at an end. Some-
"sc~e ~ings." Tiny scales, like ~inute shingles, COYer
tunes great clouds of these insects are seen along streams. their wings. Some large butterflles are said to have •
Odonata. The word comes from the Greek, and means
~ooIJud. ~e m~uths of the damsel flies and dragonflies,
many as 1,000,000 scales on their wings. These a:.aJa
l!lduded in tillS order, have sharp projections that look are the "dust" that comes off on your hands whm yo.
like teeth. Dragonflies are swift fliers. The damsel flieS touch a moth or butterfly.
. are smaller and weaker. Thev flutter about close to the Mecoptera. The name of this order means ~
veg,etati~n of swamp and stream. Dragonflies rest with and the group includes the scorpion Sies. Their
thell' wmgs outspread; damsel flies with their wings wings, usually yellow and black, extend for a
folded above their backs like butterfiics. able distance back of the curled-up tip of the
Orthoplera.~ These are the stra;gM wings. They include It is this scorpionlike tail-tip that gives the
the grasshoppers, the katydids, the crickets. the cock- common name.
~aches. and the praying mantises. The straight-edged Diptera. The two wings are the flies.
Wings of many of these insects produce the music of the minute fruit flies to the largest of the
late summer fields. The males of these species rub one include those daddy longlegs of the
wing over another like a bow rubbed over a fiddle to as well as the midges, mosquitoes,
produce their musical sounds. All have only two wings in adult form.
, I.ap~. The equal wings of this order arc the destruc- of major importance, but some species
llve terUlltes. They live in colonies in wood. Although scavengers, removing waste materials
they ,are commonly called white ants, they arc not close animals.
mauves of the true ants. Siphonaptera. This is a small but im:poz_
Dermaptera. The earwigs, with curious pincerlike or- comprises the fleas. Some species
gans at the ends ~f their abdomens, are equipped with kind of flea is found only on bats.
leathery front Wings. Hence the order name, which dine on the blood of either man or beast.
means skin wings. intelligent.
Caleoptera. The insects of this order are the innumer- Hymenaptera. The membrane WU"1"--tlbe:
able beedes. the largest group of the insect world. They ants, ichneumon flies, and other-i",,,iI,:t .. ii_oiiI
all have. sneath u:ings. The front wings have been trans- the highest development
fonned mto hard shards which provide armor fOT the Thev come the nearest to exllibiitillig
beedes' bodies. In flight. these sheaths are swung forward instinctive abilities are the most
~d the ,membranous hind wings are unfolded and put While the ants that we see nonnally
Into 3Cllon. lkcause beetles ~re biters equipped with mating time the true males aDd (emal~

u nest on a. mating flight do have wings. TJ:leir wings are


formed. hke those of the wasps and bees. thus linking
them With the H)""tnOpltra order. When ants alight after
a matinR Ai~ht, the females break off their winv;s before
cnterin~ the ground to found a new colonv. ·f-hev fly
onlv the one time. ' ,
How Insects Grow lTIOre stuff ...

Insects change a great dea] d'!.!rin~ their H't7~C: The~e chc:!!'1f!ec: can }lp so drastic that Egg @ .
~'i
;various growth stages look entirely diiierent. Metamorphosis (pronounced metta-
U mor-fo-sis and meaning change-of-shape-process) is the name given to the sequence Nymph
of changes from egg to adult. The two most common forms of insect metamorphosis
are called gradual and complete.

Gradual or incomplete metamorphosis


Here, the insect that emerges from the egg is called a nymph. It looks like a little
adult, not like a worm. As the nymph grows, it sheds its skin and after several
growth stages reaches adulthood. Wings develop from flaps on the thorax that Gradual
enlarge sideways at each stage. The young nymphs live in the same habitat and eat metamorphosis
of a mole cricket
the same food as the adults, thus competing with them directly.

Egg Day7-Nymph Day 23-Nymph


Life cycle of a grasshopper
Complete metamorphosis .
Here, the embryo hatches from the egg without features of the adult. It usually
resembles a worm and is called a larva (plural: larvae). Larvae shed their skins as Where do you fit?
Uey outgrow them and increase in size. After a certain number of sheddings, the
outer skin hardens into a tough casing and the insect is now called a pupa or
chrysalis. Some larvae which are caterpillars, like those of moths or sawflies,
construct a silk covering over the pupa and this is called a cocoon. During its pupal
stage, the insect transforms itself completely, with some cells moving into their
adult position and the remainder turning to mush and being discarded. When the
insect emerges from the pupal case, it is a winged adult and can reproduce. At first
the wings are soft and sluiveled. They are pumped up with blood to full size, then
Egg fA
enzymes tan and harden the skin. Complete metamorphosis allows the young insect

~
not to compete with the adult by living a different life from the adult in a different
habitat. For example, the leaf-eating caterpillar becomes a nectar-sipping butterfly. . ..... ' . .
-- ~:~

Complete
u Egg Larva Pupa
metamorphosis
of a Gulf fritillary

Life cycle of a two-wing fly


©TPWPress 1999 5:
There are Lots of Insects and They are Fun to Watch
More than half of all the animals known on earth
are insects. There are more than 1 million (perhaps
as many as 3 million) species of insects, whlle there
Sdentific Name Percent of
World Spedes
Common Name
olOrder
are only 1/2 million other known animal species.
: of Order
There are 100,000 or so species of insects native to
1 toleoptera 38.54 Beetles -.:: \'¥} the United States. More than 1/3 of these have been
2 Lepidoptera 14.89 Moths D"Q found in Texas. Texas has more different kinds of
3 Hymenoptera 13.69 Wasps~ insects than any other state.
Relative Importance of Insect Species
4 Diptera 13.09 Flies ~ Among All Organisms
5 ffeDliptera 6.65 True bugs ~ Rank Name of Order Percentage of Spedes
1 Insects 42.00
6 Homoptera 4.25 ffoppers . , 2 Other Animals 29.00
7 Trichoptera 0.93 Caddis flies ~ 3 Bacteria 9.00
8 Orthoptera 0.93 Locusts~ 4
5
Fungi
Single--Celled
8.00 '
9 Collembola 0.80 Springtails ~ Organisms 6.00
10 Grylloptera 0.73 Crickets~ . . 6 Plants 5.00
7· Archaebacters 1.00
11 Mallophaga 0.66 Biting lice .,~ • .
12 Odonata 0.65 Dragonflies ~
Color the area on
13 Neuroptera 0.59 Lacewing flies ~ the pie chart that
t4 Blattoptera 0.53 Roaches ~ represents Moths.
~5 Thysanoptera 0.53 Thrip.s~
6 Psocida 0.33 Barklice ~
~ Siphonaptera 0.30 Fleas 9l.
, T'. ~emerida 0.27 Mayflies ~ ..Jt
~ .Llasmida
J. 0.27 Walking sticks ~
) Termitida 0.25 Termites ~ ,~
Plecoptera 0.21 Stoneflies ~
Manteida 0.20 Mantise5~
Strepsiptera 0.18 Twistwing~~e:_ ~
Dermaptera 0.15 Earwigs~ ~
Diplura 0.09 Campodeans ",II'?\.:'-----
Anoplura 0.07 Sucking lice . .
Panorpida 0.06 Sco~ionflies ~
Lepismida 0.04 Silverfis~l{l
Protura 0.03 Telson~~f'
Machilida 0.03 BristIetails ~< Many people say they don't like "bugs", meaning
insects and other"creepy crawlies", because they
Megaloptera 0.03 Dobson flies ~ have not stopped to observe them and to realize
Embiida 0.02 Webspinners ~ 'how very few insects are really harmful. Insects are
Scolopendrellida 0.01 Symph~la~~ truly £acinating and watching their activities can
provide hours of fun. Insects are easy to find, since
Raphidiida 0.-- Snakefhes~
they are common in just about any kind of habitat.
~oraptera 0.-- Angel flies ~ You can find them in your backyard and in any field
<ar' ."ptera 0.- Snowskips ,,:0' :? or patch of woods, in lakes and rivers, in deserts
100.00 and on the seashore, but almost none at sea.
2
The Working Parts of an Insect: Outside
All insects have three body divisions:
• The head is concerned Wlth getting food and with sensing what goes on in the.
insect's surroundings. Thus, eyes (for seeing), antennae (mostly for smelling and
tasting) and mouthparts (for feeding) are all located on the head .
.• The thorax is the body division involved with movement. Thus, the three pairs
of jointed legs (typical for all insects) and the two pairs of wings (possessed by
most, but not all insects) are located on the thorax.
• The abdomen is the largest, fattest section and it contains the organs for digestion,
elimination and reproduction.

Evolution of
insect anatomy

Labrum
Front view of
an insect head

Typical Insect

Head Thorax Abdomen


Exoskeleton
The head consists of: a cap or The thorax includes: segment 55 The abdomen includes: segment 58 (often
acron (A) in front with antenna (1); orprothoraxwith pronotal reduced or fused with the thorax in wasps);
ocelli (2); eyes (3); mouth (4); shield (10); and foreleg (11); and segments 59 through 14 (simple segments
. segment 51 with upper lip or segment S6 or meso thorax with usually without appenaages); segments 515
labrum (5); se~ent 52 with jaws forewing (12) and midleg (13); to 517, carrying gonopods (16) or specialized
or mandibles (6); segment 53 with segment 57 or metathorax with appendages for mating and egg laying; the last
foodfingers or maxillary palps (7); hindwing (14) an~ hindleg (15). se~ent S18, ~gbind feelers or cerci (17)
segment 54 with lower lip or ana the paraprocts (18) or frass shapers for
laoium (8); often with acfditional eliminating waste. The anus (19) oE.en5 between
foodfingers or labial palps (9). the last segment and the telson (T).
Insects do not have a skeleton made of bones inside the body the way we and other
backboned animals do. Instead, the insect skeleton, called an exoskeleton, is a tough
skin made of a horn-like material called chitin (pronounced kai-tin). The exoskeleton
fits the insect's body like a suit-of-armor with flexible membrane joints that perm:;'
movement. As the insect grows, the body gets plumper, stretching ~e memDrant
until the skin must be shed to 2tC:8n1:Uloaate 'the larger body size.lhis sheddin,
IoI. Jf a stick insect called molting. There are several molts before an insect can mature.
TPWPress 1999 6
The Working Parts of an Insect: Inside
Inside an insect's body are the organ
5vsten15 conc-=;ne·~ ";";,:1~ -.:::.:~,._::: :ife ;:I.

fUnctions.

The digestive system [1- for extracting nutrients


from swallowed food and pushing out the waste as
frass. The system is basically a tube that starts at the
mouth (1) with salivary glands (2). The tube of
exoskeleton extends as foregut (3) to a crop (4) which
often has teeth for grinding food. The soft midgut (5)
is attached behind the crop where there are appendix-
like sacks or diverticulae (6). These secrete digestive a 1 Side view of the interior of a grasshopper.
enzymes. The midgut absorbs nutrients, which are
transported to the cells by the blood.
The circulatory system I9 - for carrying nutrients to,
and waste from, all the parts of the body. Atube-shaped "Wing
segmentally chambered heart (7) pumps the greenish-
colored blood to the front of the body along the back. ....-,-~ 8
This fluid then circulates freely throughout the body,
seeping toward the back as it bathes the cells. There
are no blood vessels. 9

The respiratory system I!j - for obtaining oxygen


from air and getting rid of carbon dioxide. Tmy tubes
called tracheae (8) (pronounced tray-key-ay), carry air
throughout the body from small outside openings called B
spiracles (9). Aquatic insects have gills as well to keep
~e tracheae from floodptg. Oxygen passes across the
Cross-section (a-a) of the interior of a grasshopper.
gill membrane into the tracheae. Gases are passed
directly between cells and tracheae. Some larger insects
such as dragonflies and bees may be seen to breathe
by muscular movement Some insects use air to make
hissing sounds.
The excretory system ~ - for getting rid of the waste
left from metabolizing nutrients. The hindgut (10)
excretes crystals of soluble waste products removed
from the blood by Malpighian tubules (11) which
function like kidneys. This soluble waste is excreted
dry and combined with discarded food detritus to form
the £rass which is expelled through the anus (12). The
dry excretion of soluble waste allows retention of water. Bottom-up view of the interior of a grasshopper.
Some wastes get stored in the hard skin of the . .
exoskeleton where they are used to make pigments for r------- Color Guide - - - - - - - ,
bright colors. G - Color the blood vessel green.
The nervous system lID - for picking up information Y- Color the digestive system yellow.
X- Color the excretory system (Malpighian tubes) red
from the sense o~ and coordinating behavior. There B- Color the nervous system blue.
is a brain (13) at the head end. A double nerve cord P - Color the air tubes of the respiratory system pink.
runs the length of the underside of the body. There are
nerve centers or ganglia (14) in each segment to control
various parts of the body. Because of these extra brains,
an ant that has lost its head will still walk.
The reproductive' system - for the production of future
generations. Females have two ovaries with eggs, and
males have two testes and an organ for mating. Females
mate and save sperm to use later. In most insects, eggs
are fertilized as they are laid. Some insects lay .
unfertilized, yet viable, eggs. This process is called Silk gland
parthenogenesis. Many insects may be parthenogenic
in summer but produce males for sexual reproduction The alimentary canal (Y), silk gland, dorsal blood
in winter.
vessel (G) and ventral nerve cord (B) of a caterpillar.

7 ©TPW Press 1999


How Insects Smell, Taste, See and Hear
Smelling and tasting are most important to insects.
Thev are chemical senses that use nerve sensors to
recognize molecules. Insects use smell and taste to
U recog:nj.ze others of the same species, distinguish
males from females, locate suitable foods and rollow
trails back to the nest.
Molecules carried by breezes land on nerve sensors
on the antennae where they are identified as smells.
Male silk moths smell pheromone (pronounced
!er-oh-moan) molecules released by a female miles
away and fly to her. Sexton beetles can smell a dead
mouse many yards away and fly to it to lay their
eggs on this food and bury it.
Other insects taste flavors by touching membranes
to foods. Beetles and cockroaches taste with their
mouth palps. Butterflies taste leaves with organs
on their feet to identify suitable caterpillar food on
which to lay eggs. Ants use their antennae to taste
the chemical trans marked for them by fellow
workers.
Seeing is also very important to insects. This
Honeycomb six-
physical sense is oased on the intensity, color sided lens facets
wavelength and polarization of light.
Simple eyes, or ocelli, are present in most larval
!"1.Sects and many adults where there may be up to
Vee. They are used to distinguish day from ni~t,
ld determine the polarization of light which 15
used to tell time or direction.
Compound eyes are found in the adults of insects
and other arthropods. The individual eyelets are
close-packed honeycomb-like to form a compound Under each facet each
eye with six-sided lens facets of clear thick cuticle. eyelet has its own receptor
Under each facet, an eyelet has its own receptor and optic nerve.
and optic nerve. We do not know how an insect
puts these individual pictures together in its brcnn.··
We do not know what a bee actually sees.
Compound eyes are good for detecting minute
movement. They also sense colors but in different
parts of the spectrum than we do. Thus bees and Grasshoppers "sing"
butterflies see the hidden ultraviolet patterns in by bowing the rigicf
flowers. furewing with a ratchet
on the inner side of
Hearing is another important sense for many their hindleg.
different insects. Most insects hear by sensing the .
vibration of small hairs or membranes on the skin.
Grasshoppers, crickets and cicadas signal their
presence by making noise with ratchets or vibrating
membranes. They make noise to communicate their
presence or attract mates. Crickets and mantises
'\ ~ membrane organs on the front legs that Crickets and mantises have
membrane organs on the front
~on as ears. Grasshoppers and cicadas have legs that function as ears.
c .on the abdomen. Many moths have ears on
either the thorax or abdomen, tuned to the
frequencies of bats, their most serious predators. 8
©TPWPress 19r
How Insects Move
Most adult insects, nymphs and many larvae have three pairs of legs, one for each segment of the middle
section of the body called the thorax. n
The usual insect leg consists of five parts:
The coxa joins the leg to the body and is often
fused with the body.
The trochanter is a small joint permitting the
leg to rotate foreward and back.
The femur looks like a thigh and is usually large.
The tibia looks like a shin.
The tarsus looks like a foot with up to 5
segments. It ends in a claw or pair of claws.
Many insects have hairy or sticky pads on the
tarsal segments for traction and tasting. All
segments of the leg may have articulated spines
or rigid teeth for traction or protection.
Foot
The shapes and proportions of the various
parts that go to make up an insect's leg vary, Toe Nail--.
depending on its way of life: Names of the parts of your leg

Grasshoppers, crickets, fleas, leafhoppers, leaf beetles and other


jumpers have muscular femurs and long propelling tibias.
Tiger beetles, ants, cockroaches and other runners have long legs
in strong sockets.
Chafers and other tree-climbing beetles have strong turned-back
claws for grasping twigs and leaves.
Hanging flies have similar recurved claws for capturing and
holding prey.
The many le~ of primitive insects
Water beetles and water bugs have padd1F!s or hair-fringed flippers (view of abdomfnalleglets and
for swimming. tubercle organs)

Pond striders, caddis flies and other pontoon walkers have fringed
feet that hold air-bubble floats permitting walking on water.
Flies and other crawlers on smooth leaves or skin have dry adhesive
pads that cling to glass with a molecular bond the same way that
plastic wrap does.
Mantises, mantis flies, assassin bugs and other hunting insects
have a forelimb with a spined.and muscular femur and opposing
tibia for grabbing prey.
The usual insect walk is accomplished with reaching forelegs,
stabilizing midlegs and pushing hindlegs. The majority of insects
have other specialized functions for one or more pairs of legs. In
Swimmer
Water-strider
addition to those already mentioned these include digging,
clasping, signaling and disguise.

;;ii:~~ !~~ -~~


-0
_
_
c:o
_
c:o -
0 -
--
When an insect walks it never lifts more than one or two legs at a time. This gives the insect walk a
wavelike motion. Each pair of legs performs a speciiic function. The forelegs reach ahead, the hindlegs
push, while the midlegs act as stabilizers.
10 ©TPWPress 1999
How Insects Feed
Insects feed on all sorts of organic materials. Some bite and che'\o\1 plant materials, others are hunters
or scavengers that ear nleat \U:)uaU) ut:n~r llbt::CtbJ, sn.i.l utners !:;uck plant juices or blood. There are even
midge larvae that feed on crude oil in tar seeps, digesting it with bacteria in the gut.
~iting and chewing mouthparts consisting of several pairs of jaws and jaw-like structures moving from
side to side are the basic kfud found in insects. These mouthparts evolved from the jointed legs of the
front segments of the early ancestor of insects. Biting and chewing mouthparts are common to beetles,
grasshoppers, cockroaches, termites and most wingless primitive insects.

Basic I(ind of Insect Head and Mouth Structure


A - The acron is the front-end head cap. It is divided on top by a V-shaped
epicranial suture, found only in insects.
o - The three ocelli or little eyes.
a - The antennae or feelers.
e - The compound eyes or big eyes.
M - The mouth opens between acron and segment 1 underneath.
1 - The labrum is the movable upper lip on segment 1 that is joined to the
acron behind and around the mouth.
2 - The mandible is the limb of segment 2 which also bears the tongue.
3 - The maxilla is the limb of segment 3. It has a coxa of two segments. 'The
mandible-like lacinia is attached to the inside of the coxa. The palp-like
galea is attached to the end of the coxa. The leg-like maxillary palp (3a)
is attached to the outer side of the coxa. This jointed palp has its trochanter
attached to the coxa, followed by femur, tibia, tarsus and pretarsus, just
like a leg.
4 - The labium is the limb of segment 4:1t has a coxa of two segments. 'The
lip-like glossa is attached to the outer segment on its inner edge. The palp-
like puaglossa is attached to the end of the same segment. The leg-like
Ulabial palp (4a) is attached to the outer edge of the same segment. This
jointed palp has a trochanter, followed by a femur and tibiotarsus.
I

This basic kind of chewing structure is modified in other ~oups of insects. Usually the modified
mouthparts take on a thiri, long, piercing and / or sucking shape.
"Modified Mouthparts
Chewing / Lapping: Piercing / Sucking: Siphoning: Sponging:
bees and some wasps most true bugs, leafhoppers, butterflies and houseflies and
treehoppers, mosquitoes, moths stableflies
fleas ana horseflies

Bee Mosquito· Butterfly Fly

lPWPress 1999 11
more stuff ...
Insects do a Lot of Good, but a Few are Pests
Like insects everywhere, Texas insects are important agents that. overall, make AKind Word
About "Bug" _~
our lives better ana 1110re mteresnng. ror Detter or worse, we share the planet
with them. Let's try to get along. The word bug has
several origins that have
How insects are beneficial or "good": been punned together to
form its present English
meanings: a "true bug"
Without insects, we would not have or hemipteran, insect-
Honeybee
pretty flowers to look at or fruits and pollinating a like, microfossil,
vegetables to eat. That is because most flower microorganism, disease,
plants need insects in orderto reproduce. defect, enthusiast,
obsession, fear, hidden
Without insects, we would have fewer microphone, asterisk, to
songbirds, lizards, frogs and mammals sting or to molest. Bwg
like bats, shrews and anteaters. These is Welsh for ghost. Bugge
animals would have nothing to eat since is Middle English for
demon, beetle or
t!l~y -all :feed on insects. scarecrow. Boggle is
North English for a
Without insects acting as Clean-up squads terrifying apparition.
and wu-bage collecto«; dead trees and Frog catching Bougre is French for a
animals would be piIiftg up everywhere. a horsefly nasty fellow. Buz is
Spanish for a hit, kiss of
respect or sting. Bogie is
a surprising event.
Bogyman is a bugaboo
or fearsome figure. These
other meanings are
probably responsible for
the general dislike and
n
fear of bugs by people
who are ignorant about
insects. Let's call the
How insects are harmful 01' "bad": whole group INSEcrs
and save BUG just for
Some insects are pests - meaning that insects of the order
their way of life is in conflict with ours. HEMIPTERA which can
bug or sting you like a
Some spoil or eat our plant bedbug with their
pointed mouthparts. _
or animal food, or destroy This excursion into
our possessions. etymology, or the study
of words, should not be
Some suck our blood confused with the subject
and sF-read disease. of this book, entomology,
~---- or the study of insects.

Harmful insects

But, aside from being "good" or ''bad'', insects are fascinating creatures to watch
and many are very beautiful.
3 ©TPWPress 1999
INSECTS IN" WINTER. : .' ;,

How and Where Some Insects OveIWinter


U
0nnriDteriDg Special Aattnor
Spedes Stage PnparatioD IDacttw

Ants Carpenter Adult Produce glycerol Inactive In trees or logs

Aphids Most
. Egg None Inactive In bark crevices or
base oftwtgs

Bumblebees. • Queen PrefertWzed eggs


inside queen
Inactive Underground.
under leaves or logs

Butterflies Monarch Adult Migrate Semi-active Mexico or California


MourntngCloak Adult Lose body moisture Inactive Under bark
Painted Lady .Adult Lose body moisture Inactive Under bark
Swallowtails Pupa Form crysa1is Inactive Attached to stems or
on the ground

Crickets Most Egg • Inactive In the ground

Dragonflies Some Egg • Inactive On the bottom


ofapond
Some Nymph • Semi-active On the bottom
ofapond
Some Adult Migrate ActIve Unlmown
U
Ftretlles Most Larva (""worms") Inactive Underground

Flies Cluster (wings


overlap)
Adult • Inactive except
whenwann
In crevices ofbulld-
~s or cracks in
hollow trees
House (Wings
diagonal to side)
Adult
• Inactive except
when warm
In crevices ofbulld-
lngs or cracks
in hollow trees

Grasshoppers Most Egg • Inactive In the ground

Japanese Beetles Larva (grubs) Inactive In the ground

Honeybees • Adult Store food Semi-active Hive In a tree or


manmadebax

Ladybug All Adult Cluster together Inactive Under leaves and


grasses
Mantlses Many Egg Brown. hardened- Inactive On bushes
foam egg case
Mosquitos Most Adult females ~ Inactive Sheltered place
Moths Gypsy Egg On tree trunks
Isabella Larva (\\bolly
Bear)
• Usually inactive Under leaves and
grasses
Cecropia
U Maple Sugar
Pupa
Adult
Spins a cocoon
Loses moisture
Inactive
Inactive
On branches
Under bark
. StoneflJes Many Nymph to
Adult • Active Stream to land

tyOM. 6. ~ls O~ )J~-ht~c.. 141


""- - .... " ..... -~-.-....----..--
t'age.1 ot j

INSECT MOUTHPARTS
One fun thing to do when you encounter any insect is to
decide what kind of mouth parts it has. Usually this means
deciding whether it's a "sucker" or a "chewer."

The picture at the right shows the coiled tube of a Tiger


Swallowtail butterfly. When a flower with nectar in it is
located, the butterfly inserts its tube (its proboscis) into
the flower and sucks up the nectar, so obviously butterflies
have sucking mouth parts.

,
r-------, At the left you see the head of a
;~ mosquito. Of course mosquitoes are
antennna
palp famous for being "flying syringes" as
..115;.:::...._ they fly about finding animals from
urr--I~;"';;"';;;';;
____- ' whom they suck blood using their specialized mouth parts. In the
picture you can clearly see the proboscis, the tlneedle" part of the
"syringe." The antenna and palp help the mosquito feel. Actually, the proboscis is not
nearly as simple in construction as a hypodennic needle. As the
drawing at the right shows, the proboscis has a groove down its front
inside which reside several extremely slender, sharp, saw-toothed

u stylets. If you ever watch a mosquito "biting" you, try to notice that
the entire proboscis does not enter your skin. Instead, as in the
drawing, its thick outer part, known as the sheath, bends, or "buckles, II
as the mosquito inserts its stiff stylets into your body. These stylets
hold together in a way that allows blood to be sucked up.

The Leaf-footed Bug (family Coreidae)


shown at the left also has sucking mouth
parts. This picture is neat because it shows the held-
together stylets outside the proboscis's sheath. In the
picture the stylets are held together so closely that they
look like just one. As with the mosquito,.as the bug uses its
stylets to cut into its victim (a plant in this case), the sheath
bends as the stylets go straight into the tissue.

At the right you


see a horse fly
head, famous for
its complex mouth parts that can cut right
into a horse's (or human's) hide. I say "cutll
because horse flies, being members of the
order Diptera, have sucking mouth parts,
not chewing. We say that horse flies II bite, "
but really they don't. Horse fly mouth parts
are composed of nine different parts. In the
lower, right comer of the picture locate the
large, black, roundish 0 bj ect, and then

http://www.backyardnature.netlinsmouth.htm 4/30/2004
Page 2 of3

notice right above it but below the eyes and


antennae the stiff-looking, brownish items. These brownish objects, composed of
several distinct parts all of which we can't see here, work together like scissors to cut
(not bite or chew) into an animal's skin and cause bleeding. Once blood is flowing the
horsefly extends the black "labium" below the scissors-like things to suck up the
blood.

........~---, At the left you see the head of a Large Carpenter Bee,
genus Xylocopa. The honey-colored, wonnlike thing at the
bottom of the mouth structure is its "glossa, II sort of like a
tongue. The dark, downward projecting items right above
the glossa are the "galea," and these are quite stiff and
sharp. If you feel of them with your finger you can
understand how a carpenter bee can "chew" its way
through solid wood, which it does when it excavates its
nest-tunnels. Carpenter bees, however, being members of
the Hymenoptera, are chewing insects, but you can
imagine that with that wormlike glossa it can also suck a
bit. Therefore this is one insect, like a number of
Hymenoptera, that doesn't fit clearly into either the
sucking or chewing category.

At the right the head of a , . . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - ,


female stag beetle,
genus Platycerus, bears
large, pincerlike mandibles that make this beetle
look very dangerous. Most adult stag beetles feed
on plant sap, so that doesn't explain why they have
such formidable mandibles. Male stag beetles, who
have much larger mandibles than the ones shown,
sometimes use them while fighting with other
males to establish dominance.

Look at the mouth parts on the paper-wasp head at


the left. One glimpse is enough to assure us that
this insect is not a sucker -- there's nothing looking
like a tube. Those two overlapping, flap-like things
at the bottom of the face are the wasp's mandibles.
Paper wasps feed chewed-up insects of various
sorts to their young, and when you see how
powerful-looking those mandibles are, and note the
toothed edges on them, you can imagine that this
I insect wouldn't have much of a problem chewing a

nice, soft caterpillar. Though both wasps and bees


are members of the Hymenoptera, you can see that there is considerable difference
between the paper wasp's mouth parts, and those of the above carpenter bee.
However, they are much more similar to one another than they are with, say, the
curled up sucking-tube of the butterfly or skipper.

Return to the INSECT DESIGN PAGE


Return to the ANIMALS MENU

http://www.backyardnature.netlinsmotith.htm 4/30/2004
T • H . E

OHIO
u SlI\TE
UN.VERStTY

Ohio State University Extension Factsheet


Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, OB 43210-1000

Tarantulas
HYG-2061B-97

William F. Lyon

Over the past few years, tarantulas have become acceptable pets
now widely sold, traded and kept in houses, apartments, schools
U and dormitories. Occasionally, these very large, hairy spiders
escape within a dwelling causing alarm and panic among those
fearing spiders. Actually, most tarantulas are docile,
rion-aggressive and rarely bite. Bites are not considered
dangerous and cause little lasting pain. Bites are no more painful
than a bee sting, and its symptoms should be treated similarly.
Some have a dense covering of special hairs on the abdomen,
which, when dislodged, cause skin irritation. This is mec;hanical
rather than chemical in nature.
.'

The name tarantula has unfortunately become associated with several spider families, but rpost often is
applied to the ones called the hairy mygalmorphs. Tarantulas have been much publicized in horror shows
in movie houses and television shows due to their forbidding hairy appearance.

Identification

The largest tarantulas are tropical with a body length of3-1/2 inches and leg span of9-1/2 inches. The
largest United States' species has a body length of two inches and leg span of about six inches. These
spiders are stout-bodied and covered with hollow, needlelike, barbed hairs, especially on the abdomen.
When disturbed, the hind legs are used to scrape off and throw very fine (fiberglass-like) abdominal
hairs in the direction of danger, resulting in a remaining bald spot. A bald spot may also occur on the
abdomen prior to the shedding of the skin. Hairs may cause a skin rash, allergic reaction and possibly
unaphylactic shock to certain individuals.

Life Cycle and Habits

of2 9114/993:33 PM
"u ---- _ ...... VI ,,"VU I J"I..UDnI

T . H • E
OHIO
SIt\1E
UNIVERSlTY

Ohio State University Extension Factsheet


Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, OB 43210-1090

Millipedes
HYG-2067A-94

William F. Lyon

Millipedes normally live outdoors but may


become nuisance .pests indoors by their
presence. At certain times of the year (usually
late summer and autumn) due to excessive
rainfall or even drought, a few or hundreds or
more leave the soil and crawl into houses,
basements, first-floor rooms, up foundation
walls, into living rooms, up side walls and drop
from the ceilings. Some homeowners as early as
late June have reported annoying populations
accumulating in swimming pools. Fall migrations during rainy and cool weather 1;nay result as a natural
urge to seek hibernation quarters. Heavy continuous rainfall in newly developed wooded areas with
virgin soil (decaying organic matter habitats) are often troublesome sites. Millipedes do not bite humans
nor damage structures,_ household possessions or foods. They can glve off a disagreeable odor and if
crushed, leave an unsightly mess.

Identification

Millipedes, or "thousand-Iegged worms II , are brownish-black or mottled with shades of orange, red or
brown, and are cylindrical (wormlike) or slightly flattened, elongated animals, most of which have two
pairs of legs per body segment, except for the first three segments which have only one pair of legs.
Antennae are short, usually seven-segmented, and the head is rounded with no poison jaws. Their short
legs ripple in waves as they glide over a surface. They often curl up into a tight "C" shape, like a watch
spring, and remain motionless when touched. They range from 1/2 to 1-1/4 inches long depending on the n
c;pecies. They crawl slowly and protect themselves by means of glands that secrete an unpleasant od~r.

of3 9114/993:36 PM
· ...• _.• - - -··· ... •••• ..... J6-I.Q~U~vvV/"'UO/A.htrnJ

the sides of the house up to the level of the first story windows, especially across doorways and other
openings. The carbamate insecticides such as propoxur (Baygon), bendiocarb (Ficam) or carbaryl
(Sevin) give the fastest lmockdown compared to the other groups of insecticides. Wettable powder

u formulations provide the best soil residual control. If foundation plantings are heavily mulched,
insecticides may have to be rodded down to the soil beneath the mulch. Repeat applications at weekly
intervals may be needed.

Treatment of peat moss, mulch, wood chips, leaves, etc. used in landscaping around the house is
important. Subsequent water sprinkling will carry the insecticide down into the soil where these
creatures hide. Do not expect immediate kill since control may be slow (three to six days or more).
Baygon bait works well when scattered along the house foundation providing fast mock-down.
Additional pesticides such as amorphous silica gel (Drione, Tri-Die), boric acid (Penna-Dust),
chlorpyrifos (Duration, Dursban, Empire, Engage, Tenure), diatomaceous earth (Answer), diazinon,
esfenvalerate (Conquer), pyrethrins (Exciter, Kicker, Microcare, Pyrethrum, Safer) and resmethrin
(Vectrin) can be used. Only the licensed pest control operator or applicator can use bendiocarb +
pyrethrins (picam Plus), cyfluthrin (Optem, Tempo), cypermethrin (Demon, Cynoff, Cyper-Active,
Vikor), deltametbrin (Suspend), lambdacyhalothrin (Commodore), permethrin (Dragnet, Flee, Prelude,
Torpedo) and tralomethrin (Saga). Fluvalinate (Mavrik, Yardex) is used outdoors. Indoors, if needed,
certain formulations ofFicam and Baygon household spray formulations will give some residual, spot or
crack and crevice control while space treatments of pyrethrins or resmethrin will paralyze or kill by
contact. Always read the label and follow directions and safety precautions.

This publication contains pesticide recommendations that are subject to change at any time. These
recommendations are provided only as a guide. It is always the pesticide applicator's responsibility, by
law, to read and follow all current label directions for the specific pesticide being used. Due to
u constantly changing labels and product registration, some of the recommendations given in this writing
may no longer be legal by the time you read them. If any information in these recommendations
disagrees with the label, the recommendation must be disregarded. No endorsement is intended for
products mentioned, nor is criticism meant for products not mentioned. The author, The Ohio State
University and Ohio State University Extension assume no liability resulting from the use of these
recoDlDaendations.

All educational programs conducted by Ohio State University Extension are available to clientele on a nondiscriminatory
basis without regard to race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, gender, age, disability or Vietnam-era
veteran status.

Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Keith L. Smith, Director, Ohio State University Extension.

TDD # 1 (800) 589-8292 (Ohio only) or (614) 292-1868

I Ohioline I Search I FactsheetslBulletins I Ordering Info I

~ of3 9/14/99 3:36 PM


T . H. E
OHIO
SfA1E
UNIVEl&TY

Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet


Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1090

Centipedes
HYG-2067-94

William F. Lyon

The house centipede, unlike most other centipedes that normally live
outdoors, can live indoors especially in damp, moist basements, cellars,
bathrooms, crawlspaces or unexcavated areas under the house. They are
sometimes seen running rapidly across the floor with great speed, stopping
suddenly to .remain motionless and then resuming fast movements,
occasionally directly toward the homeowner in an attempt to conceal
themselves in their clothing. They have a "fearful" appearance but cause no
damage to the structure, household possessions or foods. Some can bite
when handled carelessly, resulting in a slight swelling or pain no worse
than a mild bee sting.

Identification
Centipedes, or "hundred-legged WOIlD.S," are reddish-brown, flattened, elongated animals with many
segments, most of which have 1 pair of legs. The first pair of legs is modified into poisonous jaws
located below the mouth. Antennae have 14 or more segments. The house centipede is grayish-yellow
with 3 dark, long stripes down the back with the legs encircled with alternating dark and white bands.
The actual body length is an inch or slightly longer (wormlike), surrounded with 15 pairs of very long
legs making the creature appear much larger. The last pair of legs is more than twice the body length of
the fem~e. A pair of very long slender antennae extends fOlWard from the head. They move quickly and
are sometimes mistaken for long-legged spiders. Other centipedes, found outdoors, often are more
elongate with shorter legs and antennae.

Life Cycle and Habits


Centipedes are long-lived, sometimes up to 6 years. They overwinter as adults and lay eggs during the
warm months. Usually eggs are laid in the soil and protected by adults. Some species give birth to living

of3 912199 J0:37AM


- -----.--- - ............. II)'!;-.LCl\,;LI.l.UUU'.lUb l.htmJ

Additional pesticides such as amorphous silica gel (drione, Tri-die), boric acid (pennadust). chlorpyrifos
(Duration, Durshan, Empire, Engage), diatomaceous earth (Answer, Organic Plus), diazinon,
esfenvalerate (Conquer), pyrethrins (Exciter, Kicker, Microcare, Pyrethrum, Safer, X-elude) and
Resmetbrin (vectrin) can be used. Only the licensed pest control operator or applicator can use
u bendicorb+pyrethrins (Ficamplus) cyfluthrin (Optem, Tempo), cypermetbrin (Cynoff, Cyper-active,
Demon, Vikor), deltmethrin (suspend), Lambdacyhalothrin (Commodore), pennetlrrin (Astro, Dragnet,
Flee, Prelude, Torpedo) and Tralometbrin (saga). Indoors, if needed, certain formulations ofDursban,
Ficam and Baygon household Spray formulations will give some residual, spot or crack can crevice
control while space treatments of pyrethrins or resmethrin will paralyze or kill by contact. Always read
the label and follow directions and safety precautions.

NOTE: Disclaimer - This publication may contain pesticide recommendations that are subject to change
at any time. These recommendations are provided only as a guide. It is always the pesticide applicator's
responsibility, by law, to read and follow all current label directions for the specific pesticide being used.
Due to constantly changing labels and product registrations, some of the recommendations given in this
writing may no longer be legal by the time you read them. If any information in these recommendations
disagrees with the label, the recommendation must be disregarded. No endorsement is intended for
products mentioned, nor is criticism meant for products not mentioned. The author and Ohio State
University Extension assume no liability resulting from the use of these recommendations.

All educational programs conducted by Ohio State University Extension are available to clientele on a nondiscriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, gender, age, disability or Vietnam-era veteran status.

Keith L. Smith, Associate Vice President for Ag. Adm. and Director, OSU Extension.

U TOO No. 800-589-8292 (Ohio only) or 614-292-1868

I Ohioline I Search IFact Sheets I Bulletins I

of3 912199 )0:37 AM


_._-- r·-J-- .._· .. -··· .... -···_l.

The Provincial Museum of Alberta


Natural 'History
Invertebrate Zoology
Fact Sheet - Mill~pede

,__ . ._ ..... _... _ __-0· .._

Millipede
Diplopoda

DISTRIBUTION: Millipedes are found allover the world but are most common in tropical "
areas.

HABITAT: They are found under logs and stones, in moist soil and under leaf litter, They
usually avoid light.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION: Millipedes


are distinguished from centipedes by the presence
of two pairs of legs per body segment. They shun
the light and tend to hide under logs and other

u debris, and will often burrow into the ground.


Their hard exoskeleton affords some protection
against predators. When threatened, they will coil
up in a ball to protect the more vulnerable
underside. Some also have a noxious secretion
used to deter predators. Eyesight is po~r to
non-existent in millipedes. They sense by way of
their antennae which continually tap the ground
as the millipede moves along.

OBTAINING A CULTURE: A few species of


millipedes are ~ound in C~ada, mos~ly i n . Giant African Millipedes are often
Southern Ontario and Quebec. The bIgger. speCIes avaz'zabI'
e zn pet s tores even th ough th ey are
can reach 5-6
.cm,
' .but most .of them are farrly b'ezng sold z'IIegaIiy
small. Certam trOPICal speCIes are sold at pet
store but a pennit issued from Agriculture Canada is necessary to keep those.

ESTABLISHING A TERRARIUM: Setting up an environment which will meet all of the


needs of your millipedes is not particularly complicated. If you take the time to do it well, the
millipedes will be thrive, and the home will be aesthetically pleasing. Here are some tips to
follow:

1. Use a glass aquarium or other clear-sided container, It should be large enough to allow for
future growth of the culture (12" x 18" to 18" x 24"; height is not critical).
2. Be sure that your tank is well ventilated so the millipedes can breathe.
3. Fill the tank with sterilized potting soil to a depth of approximately 3 - 4 inches.

J of2 411 110] 9:17 AM


---- _ .•• -. . --····r --- - IILL~." www.J.lIIIa.c:umumon.ao.calnaturalll nsectslprojectslmi lliped_hnn
//
"

Thoroughly moisten the soil.


I

" 4. Add a piece of flat wood. for the millipedes to hide under.
u 5. One or two small plants will make the environment pleasant; it is best to leave these in
their pots.
6. Provide a dish of water.

MAINTAINING THE TEliRARIUM: Ongoing care of the aquarium is minimal, but the
following will keep the millipedes healthy and the cage looking good:

1. Keep the soil fairly damp and water the plants.


2. Clean the glass, both inside and out, with water.
3. Be careful about discarding old food if you suspect there are young. Baby millipedes are
hard to see and often attach themselves to the food.

FEEDING: Most millipedes are herbivores and feed on rotting vegetation.

1. They will eat a fair amount of food, so be sure that they have a continuous supply.
2. Millipedes will eat a combination of leaf lettuce, apple' and mushroom. Cut the food into
manageable pieces.
3. A supply of fresh water is a must.

BREEDING: Many millipedes tend to breed very well in captivity. You can encourage
breeding by keeping your adult millipedes well fed and healthy. The young are very small.
You can increase their chance of survival by observing the following:

u 1. Put a wad of cotton batting in the water dish so the young do not drown.
2. Be careful about discarding old food if you suspect there are young.

REACHING MATURITY: The millipedes will periodically moult, shedding their


exoskeleton. This is a vulnerable time for the animals. With each moult, more body segments
and legs are added. Millipedes mature according to the following pattern:

1. Sexual maturity is reached within one or two years, depending on the species.
2. Growth continues even after sexual maturity is attained.
3. The maximum age of a millipede is probably abouf 5 to 10 years, depending on the
species.

[PMA Home Page J[Natural History] [Invertebrate Zoology] [Fact Sheets]

Copyright (g 1996-2000 The Provincial Museum ofAlberta


Last ReviewlUpdme - September 26 2000

20f2 4/11101 9:17 AM


~I.W:~ti'!~:~i.l~-lMJlor.!j
4'.:.1 (~~t:t~tl il~~~~f.~.£' .'Emperor Scorpion ~~~5~~;:;\:·("
~?~, ~~-':~),~:;i;:,:~;;' , . _____ .,.t......
Ir')
Home 4. ,_: Insects

Order on-line with your credit card by using our Secure Server
and the 'Add To Order' link below.

Scorpions an example of the arthropod group called the arachnids.


Unlike insects, arachnids have more pairs of legs and do not have
three body segments.

Scorpions are found through out the world in topical and


subtropical environments. Scorpions are characterized by their
large pincer clawed fore limbs and a venomous sting on their tails
which are held over their bodies. They vary widely in their size and
potency of their venom.

Scorpions are ambush hunters. They attack and kill their food prey
by grasping the victim with their pincers and stabbing it with their
stings. The venom in the sting quickly kills the food animal. In
addition, scorpions vicously fight each other. The combatants
grapple with each other and attempt to penetrate their opponents
body armor with their sting. This combat continues until a weak
point in one combantant's body armor is found and a fatal sting
delivered.

The Emperor Scorpion shown here is one of the largest in the


world. It lives in the rain forests of West Africa were it will grow up
to 8" (20cm) long during its eight year life. Scorpions kill and eat a
variety of food animals including insects, frogs, small mice and
other small animals.

The Emperor reaches sexual maturity after about four years. Unlike
many arthropods, young scropions are born alive rather than
hatching from eggs. The young scorpions stay with their mother,

lof2 4/11/01 9:13 AM


riding on her back,,· until their first molt. They then leave their
mother to fend for themselves:

Although large and looking ferocious, the Emperor is not


considered dangerous to humans.

Emperor Scorpion
Vinyl, Length: 7.5" (19 cm), $7.80

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2of2 4/11101 9: 13 AM
Millipedes
Millipedes are often ignored as small, hannless,
insignificant critters. It's a mistake to ignore them, however.
There are some fascinating millipedes out there. Besides
some of the more colorful"animals, there is an entire genus
in California that is bioluminescent. Not all millipedes are
harmless, either. A few species can produce noxious
secretions.

Subscribe to the Millipede and Centipede Mailing List

Orders of Millipedes

Luminous Millipedes

This is a genus of small millipedes found in California.


While a few species of centipedes are known to have
luminous secretions, these are the only millipedes known to
be bioluminescent. What is especially interesting is that
these millipedes are blind. Why the luminescence?

Causey, N.B., and D.L. Tiemann. 1969. A revision of the


bioluminescent millipedes of the genus Motyxia
(Xystodesmidae, Polydesmida). Proceedings of the
American Philosophical Society 113(1): 14-33.

Davenport, D., D.M. Wootton, and J.E. Cushing. 1952. The


biology of the Sierra luminous millipede, Luminodesmus
sequoiae, Loomis and Davenport. BioI. Bulletin 102:
100-110. "

"Dangerous" Millipedes

Millipedes are generally considered to be hannless, boring


invertebrates. Actually, a number of species are capable of
producing noxious secretions (usually containing
benzoquinones) which can create superficial "burns" on
human skin and can cause damage to the eyes. Most of
these species are found in the tropics. The burning effect
can range from superficial stains or tanning to blistering.
Scarring doesntt occur, but the burn site can be noticeable
for up to 14 months. When the secretions enter an eye, they
cause a severe pain for up to two days. There can be
swelling and discharge from the eye. Species which are
known to be injurious include Rhinocricus Iethifer (Haiti),
Rhinocricus latespagor (Haiti), Polyceroconas spp. (PNG),
Spirostreptus spp. (Indonesia), Iulus spp. (fudonesia),
Spirobolus spp. (Tanzania), Orthoporus spp. (Mexico), and

10f4 4/11/01 9: 17 AM
,r.
of
/
./ Tylobolus spp. (California). Severa] of these are "giant
millipedes." There are a number of It giant °black millipedes"
in the pet trade, but those appear to be harmless species. I
should also mention that most "harmless" millipedes do
discharge a secretion which can create a mild burning
sensation if it gets into a r~cent cut.

Mason, G.H., H.D.P. Thomson, P. Fergin, and R.


Anderson. Mysterious lesions: the burning millipede. The
Medical Journal of Australia 160(11): 718, 726.

Radford, A.J. 1975. Millipede bums in man. Tropical and


Geographical Medicine 27: 279-287.

Radford, A.J. 1976. Giant millipede bums in Papua New


Guinea. Papua New Guinea Medical Journal 18(3):
138-141.

Shpall, S., and I. Frieden. 1991. Mahogany discoloration of


the skin due to the defensive secretion of a millipede.
Pediatric Dermatology 8(1): 25-27.

Jumping Millipedes

Hopkin and Read mention a millipede, DiopsiuJus


u regressus, which is capable ofjumping 2 to 3 centimeters
when startled. It does this by humping its body and
throwing the "loop" forward. The millipede itself is 3 to 4
centimeters long. I don't know where this species is found,
but will note that when I fmd out.

Hopkin, S.P., and H.J. Read. 1992. The Biology of


Millipedes. New York: Oxford University Press.

Army Recruits

Hopkin and Read m~ntion that several species of


polydesmid ~illipedes travel and live with anny ants in
South America. They live in the ant nests and scavenge
food they come across, helping to clean out organic debris
and mold in the ant nest. When the ants move to a new
location, the millipedes travel in the center of the ant
column, or are even carried by worker ants.

Hopkin, S.P., and H.J. Read. 1992. The Biology of


Millipedes. New York: Oxford University Press.

V Dirt-eating Millipedes

Most millipedes feed on decayng vegetation, but Shelley

)f4 4111/01 9: 17 AM
mentions one species of semi-aquatic millipede from caves
in Italy which has mouthpart "modified to remove organic,
clay, and limestone particles from the substrates of rivulets
and moist surfaces ofbanks."

Shelley, R.M. 1999. Centipedes and millipedes. Kansas


School Naturalist 45(3): 1~16

Keeping Millipedes:

• Keeping the Giant Black Millipede


• Steve Bullington's Pet Arthropod Page
• Keeping Millipedes

Millipede Links:

• Centre international de Mvriapodologie (elM)


• Millipedes as pests - this site has a picture of my
favorite millipede, Narceus
• Millipedes as pests II
• Millipede Defense: Use of detachable bristles to
entangle ants
• Polvxenus lagurus disribution studv
• Barbed millipedes
• Pacific Northwest Millipedes
• Millipede anatomy
• The Yellow-Spotted Millipede in the Pacific
Northwest
• Yellow-Spotted Millipede Photo
• Millipedes: Illinois Natural Ristorv Survey
(Narceus photo)
• Desert Millipede Photo
• A Pill Millipede from Madagascar
• Another Pill Millipede from Madagascar
• Le Petit Monde des Invertebres
• Introduction to the Myriapoda
• Scientific Report ,vith African millipede photos
• Developing an IPM strategv for millipedes
(Australian)
• A Rainforest Millipede
• Zebu-eating Millipede
• Millipede - online encyclopedia with pill millipede pic
• UK DipIopoda
• The Chemical Compound in Millipede's Toxic
Repellant
• BiospeJeology Abstracts - includes some myrlapod
papers
• Urban Entomologv: Pests in excessivelv damp
locations

J of4 411 1/01 9:17 AM


W.~IW.15·IIJ7/UllJJ ... WWw.pUTlone.convtenoutr.lb.5.~tr...J

./
"i~~,~1~iil,#j;~~J!~ Hermit Crab Facts
u .:...............................
~:I~;:
o JClJlar'_l',m.
The land hennit crab is formally
known as coenobiata clypeatus.

The Stages of a Hermit Crab's Life:

The female holds the eggs (several

~
hundred depending on her size) inside
her shell while they mature. The eggs
attach themselves to appendal!es on
her abdomen until they are ready to
hatch. These eggs have to be released
in the ocean. When they are ready to
hatch, the female moves the
V le_L. 1m.
appendages and the eggs are released

~
from their grip.

The hatched egg doesn't look at all


like a hermit crab. It is long, slender
with two large eyes and a pointed
snout. At this stage, the hermit crab is
mown as a zoea (zo-ee-a). It is less
u than an 118 inch in length. A zoea
grows by molting. It sheds it's outer
covering (exoskeleton). A new, larger
covering grows in its' place. Each
time it molts (3 or 4 times) the zoea
enters a stage called glaucothoe
(glaw-cotha-wee). His eyes are now
on the ends of stalks and two ofhis
appendages have become claws.
There are two long feelers called

.-.
antennae and two shorter feelers,
called antennules. Hermit crabs are in
the glaucothoe stage for about a
month. After another molt he's a
hennit crab and is ready to find
himself a shell to house his soft
abdomen. Slowly the hermit crab will
not need to go into the ocean anymore
and will live on land. It will get water
from tidal pools and where rain water
has collected. The hermit crab will
drown now if submerged in water for
too long. Hermit crabs have been
mown to live as long as 18 years in
captivity. Stoney just passed away
Sept. 20th, 2000. I had him for a little
over a year. Please say "welcomell to
v Mr. Jingles, he joins Minnie.

If you notice that your hermit crab's


reactions are slower than they used to
_ - - - - - - - . . . . . . be, it's possible that it is sick and

4/11/01 9: 17 A~1
Ion
~~----
Spider Webs
Pests Spiders are classified according to their way of life. .W ~b-;.~pinning SJltdprs ~mg. n:e.hs,
to tra insects because their vision ·s not ve ood.. They know when prey is trapped
Products on t elr we y detecting and reacting to the vibrations the line makes from their prey
movin~ and trying to get free. !i~nting.Spiders run after insects or lie in wait for
New It~ms
them. Some hunting spiders spin simple webs that stretch out along the ground to
catch insects. These spiders are grouped as hunters because they run after the insects
s..~c u re QIt-:·
Line Order that land in their webs.
Form This article will deal with silk .of spl~.er webs as well as different types of webs and how
various spiders use these webs in their daily lives. Did you know that each spider can
Pest Control produce several different types of silk?
Sale It~m$

Holiday.s

Pest Control If you need help with eliminating and preventing the formation of spider webs in and
Ord~r Status around the home, in boats or other vehicles, read about C()bweb Eliminat.or.
Other articles of interest, for both spiderJ!QlltrQI needs and general spid~r
inf9X.m3.n.QJl:

$~.cu~ch Qy! Spidet:s c.OQt~Q19fNlds.3n~(tSpid~rs. Black.Wi.d.Q.w. Spid~r B.it.es.~.nd Stings


Site Br.QJy._n__R.e..~ty.s_e.._s..pid.c.rs B(rw,n_.R.e._~.lu.$_e_Bit~

Contact Us
Size, Shape and Purpose of Webs
Niban Bait
\ Webs have different purposes, according to the individual species of spider, how it
A(b~.aot!J.g~ .fO.r
..J~~~ captures or stores its prey. Spider's silk can be used to help small, young spiders
transport to new areas (ludJoQni:qg) or be so strong that it is used to make fish nets, as
with the .N~p.hihl~pider w~.b. Other types of spider webs and their silk discussed here:

• IB;ngl~.~ts.pjder webs
• Orb web
Ant Index • Sh_~~t.w.~b_s
• (ium..:fQo.te{t}y.~hs.
• Horizontal Line Webs
A~i.~nYdy
• B..Qlas .s..p"d_~J:_We.b
Beetles/ • T1.i3.n~Ie..'v~bs
Lady_BygS
A Spiders Web is made from silk. Spiders are the only animals that use silk in their
daily lives. Spiders have seven sil s innin or ans or lands call£!1
"spinnerets ocated either in the middle or at the end of their abdomen. Each
spinneret on the spider is different from the other and used for making several
kinds of silk: attachment disk silk (leaves a zigzag pattern and gives strength to the
Bed Bugs and dragline), a strong dragline or safety line silk (gives the spider an anchor point), orb
Bed Bug web spiral line, {gives the web strength and stretchiness to catch flying prey),
Control glue-like sticky catching silk (traps and keeps captured prey on the web), swathing silk
(for wrapping and immobilizing prey), tangling cribellate silk (tangles the bristles, .
spines and claws of prey) and a protective egg sac silk (to keep baby spiders safe).

The silk is produced as a liquid, but emerges from the glands as solid silk fibers when
BoraCare the spider moves away from the attachment point. A spider's silk line is only .001-.004
mm thick. Amino acids and protein crystals help the silk maintain its stretchiness, .
Borate stiffness and strength.
Insecti cid es The silk that spiders produce are used for building webs, catching prey, storing food,
escaping from danger, making egg sacs, sending and receiving vibrating signals and for
aox~ldcrs transportation on silken ropes called "ballooning" as the spider floats through the air
on the strand of silk. This ballooning technique ensures that young spiders are
Bumble Bees scattered about. If all young were to remain in one tight area, many could starve from
lack of food for number of spiders and insects in a given area.
Calrpentcr
Some silk strands are stronger than steel strands of the same thickness. The silk of th{,/)
Ants
Nephila spider is the strongest natural fiber known to man and is used to make tote
Carpentl'r
bags and fish nets. In a specific species, spiders can use their web to capture an air
Bees bubble; with this bubble the spider can survive and hunt under water where other
spiders and insects would drown.
Chipmunks
Web-Spinning Spiders SPIDER WEB PICTURES
Cockroach
Index
Web-Spinning spiders only use the tips of their legs when creating their webs so that
their body doesn't come in contact with the web and get stuck. They use a middle claw
Cypermcthrin
and the bristles on their leg tips to hang onto a single thread that keeps them balanced
Demon WP
until their web is fully made.

Demon An Orb web is the most common type of spider web and looks like a wheel with
Insecticides spokes. It consists of outer frame lines, radial or spoke-like lines and spiral lines. The
outer frame is made up of a bridge line and two anchor lines that come together to
Dem9n Max form an upside down triangle. Three frame threads connect the corners together and
from there spoke like lines are made connecting all of the threads together.
The spiral lines are created last, starting in the very center of the web and moving
outward, so that the spider can use its sticky catching silk heavily throughout the web.
Dr. T's Nature Orb webs are created by orange garden orb weaving spiders, banded orb
products
weaving spiders, golden orb weaving spiders, humped or silver orb weaving spiders,
Electronic Pest
Control
arrowhead-shaped micrathenals, bolas spiders, marbled spiders, silk spiders, spiny-
body spiders, shamrock orbs and labyrinth spiders, who spins both the orb n
web and the tangled web.
Fire Ants
Tangled Web Spiders
Fleas
Tangled spider webs consist of a shapeless jumble of threads attached to a support
Flc~ StolU~crs such as the corner of a ceiling. Cobwebs are tangled webs that have collected dust and
Carp-et Powd~x
dirt. Cellar spiders, the comb-footed spiders (included black and brown widow
spiders), the ogre-faced stick spiders and common house spiders are spiders that make
Fly Index
Fly Sprays
these types of webs.

Frontline Sheet Webs

Fruit, Fly Sheet webs are flat sheets of silk between blades of grass or branches of shrubs or
trees. Spiders that create sheet webs also spin a net of crisscrossed threads above the
sheet. When a flying insect hits the net, it bounces into the sheet web. The
spider, which hangs upside down beneath the web, quickly runs to the insect and pulls
HerbiciQes it through the webbing. Sheet webs last a long time because the spider repairs any
damaged parts. The bowl & doily spider, the filmy dome spider, and the platform
lnsect BHits
spider form sheet webs.
TpS~,ct :B.iJes
Gum-footed Webs
Ins.,~~t.ic;jde
f1
Dusts Gum-footed webs consist of tightly woven silk strands attached between two branches. '
The upper strands are dry and built in sheltered areas away from sunlight while the
lltsJ!.~J lower strands are built in exposed area and run down to a bottom branch where they
Rcp~llcnJs. are attached. Each of the lower sticky strands are covered in sticky droplets and are
anacneo weaKly at the bottom. When an insect walks into the sticky silk strands its
struggle break the lines movi~g the web upwards and lifting the prey off the ground
Lnwn Pests reducing its chances of escaping.
Redback spiders create gum-footed webs.

Horizontal Line Webs


Maxforce
I~oach Bait Gel
Horizontal Line Webs are made up of one simple line of sticky droplets stretching
across low vegetation, bark and leaf litter. Spiders that create this type of web pull the
Mice
line taut by keeping the slack silk underneath them until an insect hits the line. When
that happens, the loose silk whips along the line and tangles the prey. Cribellate
Molecrickets
spiders and other pea-sized spiders create these webs.
Moles
Bolas Spider Web
Mo~qlJjtQ
C..QntrQI The Bolas Spider Web is a very simple web designed for their unique method of
hunting. In order to hunt and catch male moths, the bolas spider sits on a horizontal
Moth Trap line and spins a single line with a sticky silk tip that dangles from its leg. While
waiting, this spider will emit a scent similar to a female moth. When the male moth
Niba,lG, comes toward the spider, the spider swings the sticky strand in a circle and captures
Niban FG
the moth, pulling the strand in to feed.
UdQ'·
EUmina,tiQn Triangle Webs
Qyer~lLQ,!I1 Triangle Webs are created in the shape ofa triangle, hence its name. The spider
Eh:~~m.t weaves silky strands of spokes and spirals that connect to all three strands. The
GrftlJ.y.l~~
triangle spider waits at one end of the web for an insect to land. When it does, the
spider shakes the web so the insect is caught and cannot escape.

Hunting Spiders

Funnel Web spiders construct large, flat, horizontal webs of non-sticky silk with a
Pest Topics funnel at one end in grassy areas. The funnel is open at both ends so the spider can
escape if necessary.. When the spider feels the vibration of is prey, it dashes out, bites
Powderp,ost the insect and carries it back to the funnel.
JJeetles
Funnel web spiders are also known as grass spiders.

Nursery Web Spider

The Nursery Web spider is considered a hunting spider because it only builds a web
Roaches when laying her eggs. She carries her eggs in a silk sac close to her body until just
before they hatch. The egg sac is then attached to a leaf and a web is built around it.
Rat Traps The female spider then stands guard nearby until spiderlings hatch from their eggs.

Rilt "Z~pp~r Pictures of Spider Webs


20PO

Rodent"p,~Jt~

Rodent
Removal

Rodents
• SHEET WEB
Safeguurd
Humane Live
AJ)b!l~t TI.·~ns

Scythe
Herbicide
• FILMY DOME WEB
SedgeHam mer

Spiders

Sl.uggo

Snakes
• FUNNEL WEB
SnHke-A-Way
Snake
Repellent

-
Snal<.c Pictures ;.::;':~
• ::I-' • ~ •

d '~~!.~.::, ~: .,~ •.

5.11S pen (LSe


• ORB SPIDER WEB ~:,;~j
Pest Control Information Pest Control Sup-p-lies TQRics Site M~n S.nidel' InformJltjon
Talstar s.n.i~t~r..C_Qntl·ol Co.b.web. Elimin~Jj(m PI~cI<1¥i.do_w.Spider~it~s_and Stings
6.r~m'_n_R~clu~e Spider Bite of aro."!n R~cll!s.~ Spider Webs
Tempo
Insecticides

Term.it~s

Ultraviolet Fly
Traps

Fly Zuppers

WildljJe

White Footed
Ants

White Grubs

Woodpecliers

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P.i.sclaimel'

Kempo Ka)'al~
DojQ,
PensacolaJ"I.,.

Ppst Control
,'.".:-': . : C;lf(jpn~t Biological Supply f.:ompany :'.

u
Madagascan Giant Hissing Roaches
Lisa Darmo. Ph.D .• and Fran Ludwig
GeneticslLiving Zoology Department, Carolina Biological Supply Company
and Lexington Public Schools, Lexington~ Massachusetts 02173

Figure 1: Adult male Madagascan giant hissing roach. Actual size.

Would you invite these exotic animals into your classroom?


They are guaranteed to attract a crowd! Madagascan giant
hissing roaches, Gromphadorhina portentosa, are spectacular
insects that instantly draw the attention and curiosity of
students and are very easy to care for and handle. Large and
easy to see, Madagascan roaches are ideal for classroom
observations and science projects. They are slow moving,
wingless, docile, have little or no odor, and do not bite.
Known as "living fossils . " these insects are very similar to the
prehistoric cockroaches that lived on Earth long before the
dinosaurs. With appropriate supervision, even young students
·u can handle them.

The cockroach family, to which Madagascan roaches belong, is among the most primitive of the winged
insects. The nearest relatives to cockroaches include mantids, grass-hoppers, stick insects, and termites
(Cornwell 1968). The fossil record shows that roaches were very abundant during the Carboniferous
period, 250 million years ago. There are at least 3,500 known species living today, in 450 genera, most of
which originate in the tropics.

As a group, cockroaches exhibit a wide diversity of sizes, colors, and habits. Although they have an
infamous reputation as household pests, in reality only about half a dozen species (less than one percent
of all known forms) have negative associations with humans. Many species are diurnal, some are
semi aquatic. others live in the ground or are wood-boring. Some, such as the Madagascan roach, do not
have wings. About a dozen or so species live commensally in the nests of ants, wasps, or termites. There
are also roach species that inhabit caves with bats or live in the desert. The majority of cockroaches in
tropical countries exist as scavengers outdoors, feeding on vegetation and organic matter in an apparently
harmless fashion.

Biology and Life Cycle

Figure 2: Side view, illustrating differences in the thorax and


antennae in female (top) and male (bottom) Madagascan
u roaches.

The Madagascan giant hissing roach is a large (adults, 2-3


inches long and 1 inch wide), wingless member of the
I'nl'J.,rn!:al'h f!:arnil" (1=io 1 \ Thi~ inc':'l't ic n!:at;",:. tn th,:. icl!:anl'l nf'
M;d~;:;~a~~'~ffth~':~s~~~ ~;:~;·~f·Mri; ~h;r;i~ ;;;~;r~' ~~-
to play the ecological role of scavenger on or near rotten logs _ ..
in savannah areas. Little is known of its behavior in the wild.
(The Madagascan roaches supplied by Carolina Biological are captive bred in the United States and are
not collected from the wild.) Recently, these roaches have become very popular in museums, zoos, and
classrooms for hands-on explorations of insect morphology and behavior, and as an example of the
importance in the web of life (ecosystem) of an "unhuggable" organism.

Madagascan roaches exhibit sexual dimorphism, meaning that males and females look or act differently.
Sexual dimorphism is common in animals where males and females have distinct roles in mating and
courtship (e.g., the male deer with antlers, the colorful male peacock, and the male cricket that chirps
loudly to attract females).

Male Madagascan roaches have prominent protrusions, called pronatal humps, on the thorax, which look
like horns. Females have a smoother thorax with very small bumps or none at all. Also, the antennae of
males are much brushier than those of females (Fig. 2). Fraser and Nelson (1984) have studied
communication and behavior in laboratory colonies of these insects, and they observed that male
Madagascan roaches establish territories that are defended from other adult males. Aggressive hissing and
posturing behavior is used to warn intruders away~ males use their pronatal humps as rams in combat to
physically defend territories. These interactions do not seem to result in injury or death. Females are
gregarious and do not fight among themselves or with males. Numerous females and nymphs (immature
stages) are permitted into male territories, with courtship and mating often occurring within the territory.

The species is unusual among insects in that the females appear to bear living young. Actually, the young
emerge from an egg case (ootheca), which has been retained within the body of the mother. This is ~ n
known as false ovoviparity. The ootheca is whitish and about an inch long. It is divided into many
compartments. each of which contains an egg. Sometimes stressed females release the egg case before the
eggs can develop. Gestation is usually about 60-70 days. Normally, a female gives birth to 20-40 babies,
known as nymphs, over a two-day period. Each nymph is about 1I4-inch long (about the size of a small
watermelon seed) and very flat. The young may remain grouped around the female for some time after
emerging as she protects them by raising her body over them (Cornwell 1968).

The nymphs, which resemble miniature adults, grow fairly rapidly. They usually go through six molts,
reaching adult size in the seventh instar (or stage). The young Madagascan roach needs to molt (shed its
exoskeleton) as it gets larger, since its hard, outside covering does not expand very much to
accommodate the growing insect. Grasshoppers, praying mantises, and termites, which are close relatives
of the roaches, develop in the same way. When a nymph is about to molt, you see a crack in the
lengthwise line on the back of the insect. The exoskeleton has split and a white, black-eyed, larger-sized
roach emerges. Within a day, the color darkens as the new exoskeleton hardens. The newly emerged
cockroach usually recycles nutrients by eating the shed exoskeleton. Nymphs reach maturity in five to ten
months, with faster maturation at higher temperatures. Adults may live for two to three years.

Hissing
The Madagascan giant hissing roach is notable for its unique ability to produce an audible hiss. This
sound is produced by pushing air forcefully through a pair of modified spiracles (openings in the abdomen
of insects that are normally used for breathing). In the classroom the hissing response is most often
observed when roaches, unaccustomed to being handled, are picked up. This is one of the few defensive
n
behaviors that this harmless insect has to avoid predators. The roach also tucks its small head and
• '., ., .,..,., ., , , •t t t ,,..

2
antennae unaer tne tnorax. 1 ne tnorax tnen resemOles tne large neaa or some aggressIve ana nOISY
animal!
u Madagascan hissing roaches also use hissing as a means of communication. Hissing in response to a
disturbance may signal the presence of danger to other roaches. Adult male roaches hiss during
aggressive encounters (defending territories against other males), and during courtship and mating.
Females and late-stage nymphs hiss only when they are disturbed or threatened.

Nelson and Fraser (1980) reported that the Madagascan giant hissing roach has evolved a sound-signaling
system that appears to serve for communication and maintenance of social structure. They measured the
acoustical characteristics of hisses associated with some social displays in the species and described how
hissing was incorporated in the social displays.

Nelson and Fraser identified five distinct hisses that were highly correlated with specific interactions,
depending on whether defensive signaling, territoriality, or courtship was occurring. Males that were
muted so that they were unable to hiss were almost never successful at mating with females. The
researchers concluded that, while behaviors other than sound production (such as olfactory clues) are
important in courtship and aggressive interactions, sound plays an important role in communication, and
it may be necessary at one point in courtship.

Care and Handling

Most of the time (75 percent), Madagascan roaches are not very active. A clear shoebox is fine for a pair
ofroaches~ a few holes are needed to provide air. If the lid is not very tight-fitting and secure, tape the lid
shut around the edge. If a pet box with a snap-on lid is used for pregnant females, place a square of
muslin or light cotton over the top of the cage. Use the lid to hold the covering in place so that newly
emerged nymphs will not escape through the openings in the top. Madagascan roaches are strong animals
that have been known to escape and wander, and nymphs can fit through small spaces! While they are not
adapted to living among humans, as are their more prolific and faster-moving cousins, the German and
American cockroaches, Madagascan roaches are potential household pests. Use caution in securing your
cage.

Figure 3: Electron micrograph of Madagascan roach limb, showing hooks and


sticky pad used in climbing. 50x actual size.

Wood chips or bark are good substrates for the bottom of the cage and
provide hiding areas. Gravel, pine shavings, or crushed corncobs are also
acceptable coverings for the bottom of the cage. You may also provide half an
egg carton or a cardboard roll from paper towels for hiding spots, and you may add a branch for
climbing. In a cage with just a few roaches, the substrate should be replaced about every four to six
months as needed. If your roaches have been breeding, the material should be sieved to avoid throwing
away small nymphs.

Place the cage in a warm location, as Madagascan roaches are tropical. They seem to do well at room
temperature (72-76 degrees F). At higher temperatures (80 degrees F) they are more active and may
breed~ and at lower temperatures (66 degrees F) they are sluggish and will probably not breed. Although

u they survive brief exposure to lower temperatures (above freezing), do not keep Madagascan roaches at
temperatures lower than 65 degrees F or higher than 85 degrees F. Unless you plan to breed the roaches
or have a poorly heated room, you should not need an additional source of heat.

3
Madagascan roaches are nocturnal, meaning they are most active at night. One way to observe the
night-time activities of the insects during the day is to reverse the photocycle (Bell 1981). Outfit a fairly
dark room or closet with a 100-watt light and timer that will turn the light on from about 6:00 PM to .n
6:00 AM for 12 hours of light. The roaches will be active from about 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM. Best results
for behavioral observations will be obtained if the terrarium stays in a dark room, with a red light for
illumination during daylight hours. A 40-watt red incandescent bulb may be purchased in most stores with
a varied selection of lighting supplies. You can see the roaches, but they perceive that it is night and go
about their normal nocturnal activities.

Feed your Madagascan roach dry dog, cat, or rodent food supplemented with pieces offresh fruits and
vegetables. Good fruits and vegetables for these insects include orange slices, banana peels, carrots,
apple, grape, sweet potato peelings, potato slices, etc. Use small pieces (1 inch square or less) and feed
moist food sparingly, since high concentrations of fermentation gases are harmful. Remove moldy food
regularly. Provide water with a damp sponge in a small cup or dish.

When handling a Madagascan roach, pick up the insect very gently around the thorax (the hard section
behind the small head). Be careful not to jerk, since the feet have sticky pads and hooks that grip tightly
(Fig. 3). If you pull too hard, you may injure the insect. Let the roach crawl from your hand to another
person1s hand. It will not move very quickly, and it will not bite. These insects are not fragile, but you
should always be gentle with them.

It is fairly common to see tiny light-colored creatures, called mites, crawling on your roach. Just as dogs
get fleas, Madagascan roaches sometimes carry mites. These mites only live on the roaches, and will not
harm or live on humans. Mites can be removed by gently shaking the roach in a plastic bag with a small
amount of flour (the IIshake and bake ll method). The mites fall off the roach into the flour. Tie off and
discard the bag, and gently spray the excess flour off the roach with plain water from a plant mister or 0
wash bottle. Mites may also be removed with a small paintbrush. Repeat the treatment if mites reappear.
There is another kind of small mite that occasionally infests food; it can be controlled by discarding old
food and changing litter.

Classroom Exercises
Figure 4: With the proper introduction, most children find Madagascan
roaches to be fascinating and fun.

An article of this scope can only begin to touch upon the many
educational uses of Madagascan roaches. We recommend that for high
school to college students, you consult William Belrs excellent book,
The Laboratory Cockroach, which includes experiments of varying
complexity for the study of the anatomy, morphology, physiology, and
behavior of roaches. This book should be available through interlibrary
loan from most universities with an entomology department or a fairly
extensive library. Since Madagascan roaches are relatively expensive animals, experiments that involve
dissection or sacrifice of the specimen may be confined to other large, less expensive genera, such as
Blabberus or Periplanata.

Younger students can conduct simple observational experiments using Madagascan roaches (Fig. 4). The
our other article on roaches, IIEncounter with an Unhuggable was excerpted from a program presented
ll
:~
to teachers by Fran Ludwig (K-5 Science Specialist, Lexington Public Schools). The program is designed

4
To use this page effectively, children will need a worksheet from books published by
Elton P~blicatjons.

Ancient Animals
Fossils of animals that look like scorpions show that these animals have been around
for more than 400 million years. In all that time, they have not changed very much.

Habitat
Scorpions can be found in many countries of the world. Australian scorpions are not as
poisonous as those found in Africa or North America. In Australia, these interesting little
animals can be found in rainforests, deserts woodlands and even in cities.

They are not seen during the day because they come out in the hours of darkness.
During the day, scorpions hide under rocks or logs. In some places like the south-west
of Australia, they dig burrows in the soft sand.

Food .
At night, scorpions hunt for other small animals. They like spiders and insects the best.
The scorpion grasps the animal in its pincers (called pedipalps). Then the poisonous
sting bends right over the front of the head and stings the hunted animal.

In turn, scorpions can become food for other nocturnal hunters. Lizards and birds are
ueir main hunters.

Vision
Scorpions can have between six and twelve eyes. Two of the eyes are in the middle of
its back. Even so, they can't see very well. Instead, they can feel the smallest vibrations
of other animals moving in the darkness.

Appearance
Adult scorpions can be between seven and twelve centimetres long. Some species
grow bigger than others and there are many different species in across Australia. Some
species are black. Some are dark brown and others are a brown-orange colour. They
have eight walking legs and a pair of powerful pincers. The body or carapace of a
scorpion is covered with a hard shell. They have no internal bones. The body is divided
into seven sections and the tail has five sections.

Pain?
Fortunately, Australian scorpions aren't as poisonous as those in other countries. A
sting might hurt for a few hours. The victim might need some treatment for pain but
there should be no long lasting effects.

Breeding and Babies


The male scorpion grasps the female. He lays a sperm packet on a ground or a piece of
wood. Then he drags the female over the sperm packet and she draws it into her. In
some species of scorpion, by the end of mating, all that is sometimes left of the male
-;;corpion is a few pieces of hard shell. The rest is gone. It has been eaten by the
Umale.
The young are not born for many months; often between six and twelve depending on
the species of scorpion. The baby scorpions are born alive. There are usually more
than a dozen babies. They crawl out of their mother's body through a small opening
just behind the mother's head. The babies are white. They cling to their mother's back
and are carried around by her until they are old enough to care for themselves, usually
a couple of weeks or until they molt for the first time. Sometimes the mother will eat a
few of her babies.

The young will molt about six times until they are fully grown. (Molting means they shed
their hard skin. Their skin does not grow with their body, so they shed their skin and
grow a new one.) It might take eighteen months or more before they are fully grown and
capable of breeding.

Did you I{now'!


1. Scorpions kill over a thousand people a year in Mexico.
") There are over] 500 species of scorpion but only 25 can kill people.
3. Some scorpions can live a year without food or water.

LINKS
1. A1Lftb.Q.lJt~~Qrp.i.QJ1S'..
2. Scorpion records.

n
Texas Agricultural Extension Service
The Texas A&M University System
u

L-1678

Scorpions
John A. Jackman

Professor and Extension Entomologist

The Texas A&M University System.

Scorpions are arachnids, close relatives of ticks, mites and spiders. They are easily recognized by their
characteristic shape. Scorpions prefer dryland habitats but they do occur throughout Texas. They can be a
nuisance when they interact with humans because they will sting when disturbed.

VDescription

All scorpions have a long, slender body with a five-segmented tail that can be arched over the back. The tail
ends in a bulb-like poison gland or stinger. Scorpions have four pairs of legs and two large pincer-bearing arms
(pedipalps) in front. Scorpions are.well equipped to defend themselves or attack prey with their pincers and
stinger. Between the last pair of legs is a comblike structure (pectines) that is used to identify surface textures
and to detect prey.

Scorpions have two eyes on the top of the head, and usually two to five pairs of eyes along the front corners of
the head. They do not see well, however, and must rely on the sense of touch, using their pectines and other
organs for navigation and hunting. Their bodies are flat, which allows them to hide in small cracks, under rocks
and under bark.

Worldwide, scorpions range in size from Y2 inch·to 7 1/4 inches long (including the tail) depending on the
species. The most common species in Texas is the striped bark scorpion, Centruroides vittatus. The adult
scorpion is about 2 Y2 inches long, which is typical of the size of all species found in the state.

Biology

Scorpions hide during the day and become active at night. This behavior helps scorpions manage temperature
and water balance, important functions for survival in dry habitats. Many species dig burrows in the soil. They
detect and capture prey by the sense of touch. They also have a well-developed sense of hearing.
j .

UScorpions hide under stones, bark, wood or other objects on the ground where they wait or search for prey.
Chief foods are small insects, spiders, centipedes, earthworms, and other scorpions. Once they capture their
prey, they use the large pincers to crush and draw it toward the mouth. The body juices of the prey are eaten by
the scorpion.
Some species may live for 20
to 25 years, but longevity of
the typical scorpion is
between 3 and 8 years.

Adult scorpions may have


several broods of young.
Following an elaborate
mating process, which lasts
from 24 to 36 hours, the
female undergoes a gestation
period ranging from 5 Dorsal view 01 a scorpion.
months to more than 1 year.
The young are born alive in semi-transparent sacs. As soon as the young scorpions free themselves from these
thin wrappers, they climb onto their mother's back. Already capable of stinging, the young scorpions leave the
mother after several days and begin to fend for themselves. Scorpions reach maturity in a year or more,
depending on availability of food.

The sting of scorpions may be painful, or even deadly, depending on the species. Of 1,500 species of scorpions
worldwide, only about 20 to 25 are regarded as dangerous. Stings from such species may cause paralysis, severe
convulsions, cardiac irregularities, or breathing difficulties that may lead to death. Antivenins are available in
areas where dangerous scorpions live.

A scorpion's venom is a mixture of compounds including neurotoxins that affect the victim's nervous system.
Fortunately, none of the species in Texas are considered deadly. Stings from most of these species are about as
painful as a bee or wasp sting, but the severity of the sting is dependent upon the individual scorpion and the
person's reaction to the venom. As with any arthropod venom, allergic reactions are possible. In these situations,
immediate medical attention would be required. n
Habitat

Scorpions may be found in many types of habitats in the United States, including desert flats, sand dunes, desert
and mesic mountains, grasslands, pine forests, deciduous forests, and chaparral. Species are most diverse in
desert areas.

Taxonomic Status

About 90 species of scorpions have been identified in the United States. Texas has 18 species and only one
species, Centruroides vittatus, occurs throughout the state. It is the only species of scorpion found in the eastern
part of Texas. The number of species found in the state increases moving west and south. One species has been
recorded in the Dallas area, two recorded near Austin, four near Amarillo, three near Abilene, five near Ft.
Stockton, eight in the Ft. Davis region, eight near Langtry, and 14 in Big Bend National Park.

Striped Bark Scorpion

The common, striped bark scorpion has two broad, black stripes running the length of its back. Populations in
the Big Bend may be only faintly marked or completely pale. The basic color of the scorpion varies from yellow
to tan in adults. Immature scorpions may be lighter in color. There is a dark triangular mark on the front of the
head above the eyes. In young scorpions, the base of the pedipalps and the last segment behind t4e abdomen is
dark brown or black. This species can be easily identified by slender pedipalps (pincer-bearing arms) and the n
long, slender tail. The tail is longer on males than females. '

The striped bark scorpion apparently mates in the fall, spring or early summer. Gestation requires about 8
months. Litter size varies from 13 to 47. The average is about 31 young per litter.

Inlmature scorpions molt within 3 to 7 days after birth and remain on the mother for another 3 to 7 days after
that. There are five or six molts to maturity. A striped bark scorpion probably lives for approximately 4 years.

The sting of this species causes local pain and swelling. Deaths attributed to this species have not been
substantiated.

Urhe striped bark scorpion is often found under rocks, under boards and in debris. It can be found indoors or
outdoors in a wide variety of habitats (pine forests in East Texas; rocky slopes, grasslands, juniper breaks in
other parts of the state). Centruroides are active foragers that do not burrow. They are distinctly associated with
dead vegetation, fallen logs and human dwellings. It is common for them to climb trees and walls, and many
times have been found in the attics of homes. During periods of hot weather, scorpions may move into living
areas to escape the high temperatures in attics.

Scorpion Stings

When handled or disturbed, scorpions can inflict a painful sting using the poison gland at the end of the tail.
Avoiding their habitats helps prevent stings. The stings from Texas scorpions produce only moderate reactions
in most people because the poison has little affect on the nervous system. However, a person who is stung by a
scorpion should be watched closely for adverse reactions. An ice pack applied to the affected area will relieve
some pain. If swelling andlor pain persists or if breathing difficulties occur, immediate medical attention is
necessary.

Scorpions as Pets

Scorpions have been kept as pets, but this practice is strongly discouraged. Scorpions should never be kept
indoors or around small children. Scorpions with even relatively low poison levels can produce fatal reactions
in young children and also in adults allergic to the toxin.
\

Vontrol

Scorpions are difficult to control with insecticides alone. Therefore, the flrst control strategy is to modify the
area surrounding a house.

• Remove all trash, logs, boards, stones, bricks and other objects from around the home.
• Keep grass closely mowed near the home. Prune bushes and overhanging tree branches away from the
house. Tree branches can provide a path to the roof for scorpions.
• Store garbage containers in a frame that allows them to rest above ground level.
• Never bring firewood inside the house unless it is placed directly on the flre.
• Install weather-stripping around loose fitting doors and windows.
• Plug weep holes in brick veneer homes with steel wool, pieces of nylon scouring pad or small squares of
screen wire.
• Caulk around roof eaves, pipes and any other cracks into the home.
• Keep window screens in good repair. Make sure they fit tightly in the window frame.

To control scorpions with chemicals, use insecticide products that contain any of the following:

• permethrin (Prelude®, Dragnet®);


• cyfluthrin (Tempo®);
• cypermethrin (Demon®);
• lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand CS®);
• deltamethrin (Suspend®);
u •

propoxur (Baygon®);
diazinon;
• chlorpyrifos (Dursban®);
• malathion;
• synergized pyrethrins.
Barnacle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A barnacle is a type .of arthropod belonging to infraclass Cirripedia in the


Usubphylum Crustacea and is hence distantly related to crabs and lobsters.
Some authorities regard Cirripedia as a full class or subclass, and the orders
listed at right are sometimes treated as superorders. Around 1,220 barnacle
species are currently known. The name "Cirripedia" means "curl-footed".

Barnacles were first fully studied and classified by Charles Darwin, at the)
suggestion of his friend Joseph Dalton Hooker, in his quest to further his
ongoing development of the theory of evolution and natural selection.
--··-·-··---·--··--·---·---·--~----·-·-·l

Contents I
• I Life cycle I
I


2 Classification
3 Synonyms
I
• 4 References
• 5 External links

Life cycle "Cirripedia" from Ernst Haeckel's


Kunstformen der Natur (1904). The crab at
Barnacles have two larval stages. The first is called the naupIius, which the centre is nursing the extema of the
Sacculina
,spends its time as part of the plankton, floating wherever the wind, waves,
uurrents, and tides may take it, whilst eating and molting. This lasts for about
Kingdom: Animalia
two weeks (and five larval instars) until the second stage is reached. At this
point the nauplills metamorphoses into a non-feeding, more strongly Phylum: Arthropoda
swimming cyprid larva. The cyprids settle down in an area where Subphylum: Crustacea
environmental :.!!!?! indicate a SEe
and (!!oductive environment. If they don't, Class: Maxi 1I0poda
the larvae will die.
Subclass: Thecostraca
When an appropriate place is found, the Infraclass: Cirripedia
cyprid larva cements itself headfirst to Burmeister, 1834
the surface and then undergoes
metamorphosis into a juvenile barnacle.
Typical barnacles develop six hard Acrothoracica
armor plates to surround and protect Thoracica
their bodies. For the rest of their lives Rlf
they are cement"ed to the ground, using

~-
Balanus balanoides
-- .-..~,.-.". -.. ~ ---
""' .......... -
!
...... -.~-- .... ... ----\
their feathery legs to capture plankton and gametes when spawn ing. They are
usually found in the intertidal zone.

Once metamorphosis is over and they have reached their adult form, barnacles will continue to grow, but not molt.
Instead, they grow by adding new material to the ends of their heavily calcified Elates.
-
Like many invertebrates, barnacles are hermaphroditic and alternate male and female roles over time. Barnacles have the
longest penis in the animal kingdom, in proportion to their body length [1]. -

'-damacles often attach themselves to man-made structures, sometimes~o the structure's detriment. Particularly in the case
of ships, they are classified as fouling organisms.

However, some members of the class have quite a different mode of life. For example, members of.the genus SacculinCi
are parasitic on crabs.
The Barnacle Goose gets its name from the ancient European belief that it grew from the gooseneck barnacle, Pollicipes
polymerus; eggs and goslings of this bird were never seen because it bred in the remote Arctic. Since barnacles are
seafood, the Barnacle Goose was counted as a fish, and could be eaten by Catholics on Fridays, when meat llsed to be
forbidden.

Classification
This article follows Martin and Davis in placing Cirripedia as an infraorder of
Thecostraca and in the following classification of cirripedes down to the level of
orders: [2]

Infraclass Cirripedia Burmeister, 1834

• Superorder Acrothoracica Gruvel, 1905


• Order Pygophora Berndt, 1907
• Order Apygophora Berndt, 1907
• Superorder Rhizocephala MUller, 1862 Balanidae, Mission Beach
National Park, Queensland,
• Order Kentrogonida Delage, 1884 Australia, 2002
• Order Akentrogonida Hafele, 19 I 1
• Superorder Thoracica Darwin, 1854
• Order Pedunculata Lamarck, 1818
• Order Sessilia Lamarck, 18 I 8

Synonyms
Other names for this group of crustaceans include Thyrostraca, Cirrhopoda (meaning
"tawny-footed"), Cirrhipoda, and Cirrhipedia.

Corrosion caused partly by


References barnacles

I. A Barnacle general biology

(http://www.museum.vic.gov.au/crustibarnbiol.htmI). Museum Victoria (1996).


2. A Joel W. Martin and George E. Davis (2001). An Updated Classification o/the Recent Crustacea
(http://www.nhm. org/research/publications/CrustaceaClassification.pdj). Natural History Museum of Los Angeles
County.

External links
1. Rock barnacle (http://www.vattenkikaren.gu.se/faktalarter/crustace/cirripedlbalacren/balacre.html) at Aquascope
2. Barnacles (http://www.mesa.edu.au/friends/seashoreslbarnacIes.html) from the Marine Education Society of
Australasia
3. http://collections.ic.gc.ca/artifacts/kosapsom/images/barnacle.jpg
4. http://www .nhptv .orglnatureworkslgraphics/bamacle.jpg
5. Barnacles in Spain (http://www.iberianature.com/material/barnacles.htm) Article on barnacles in Spain, and their
collection and gastronomy.

Retrieved from ''http://en.wikipedia.org/wikilBarnacle''

Category: Crustaceans

• This page was last modified 09:45, 9 January 2007.


• All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation
License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Crayfish
u Frank Ball

Basic Biology

Crayfish (Crawfish, Crawdad, Freshwater Lobster, etc.). There are some 150 species in North
America, over 540 species worldwide.

Color and size varies with species, diet, and age. Most are red, some are green, brown, tan, or blue
with black or orange markings in various combinations. Often juveniles will be a light tan color that
turns to a deep red as an adult. The coloration depends in part on their diet, and can change with a
change in diet. Adult size is 2" to 6" for most US species. Some Australian varieties can be much
larger.

They grow by molting, that is they shed their carapace (shell) when they outgrow it, and form a new
hard shell. When they first molt they are soft. and very vulnerable to attack by other crayfish or fish. It
can take a couple days for the new shell to fully harden. Juveniles can molt every week or so. Adults
may only molt a couple times a year, and only under the right conditions. The empty shell should be
left in the tank. where it will be consumed over the next few days to recover the lost minerals and help
form the new shell.

Lifespan: about 2-3 years. but varies with species. Some live longer.

Water conditions

Not critical. Freshwater, but can tolerate a wide range of conditions. Cool, hard, alkaline, well aerated
water is best for most species.

A temperature range of 65-77 F (18-25 C) is best for good growth of most species from the continental
United States, but they can survive over a much wider range. Some species are tropical, some require
cold water.

If the water is too soft or the pH is too low then there is a risk of calcium deficiency that could inhibit
molting. Medium hard or hard water with a slightly alkaline pH. 7.5 - 8.5, is best.

They are normally 100% aquatic. but they can survive out of the water as long as their gills remain
wet. They do not need to leave the water. The tank should be covered to prevent them from Climbing
out and going exploring around the house. They can climb up between the tank wall and a
under-gravel.lift tube, or climb up plants or a heater.

Diet

Omnivorous-fish. shrimp, meat. vegetables (frozen peas. boiled zucchini. carrots. etc.). sinking pellets,
table scraps. Don't feed too much fat. Adults do not need a lot of protein. and should be fed primarily
vegetables. I feed mostly frozen peas. some Tetra Tabimin pellets. carrots. and they catch the
occasional fish. They also like the crickets that drown in my toad tank (the toads won't eat dead
crickets).

Since they like vegetables they will eat many plants. They will devour plants that nothing else will eat,
like Java Moss. They will uproot the plants they don't eat. I have lots of floating Hornwort
(Ceratophyl/um demersum) in my tank. They don't eat that too fast (it grows fast). and they like the
cover above them.

) of4 4111/01 9: J 8 AM
.r

Behavior

Nocturnal. They like to hide during the day and need hiding places. Pieces of PVC pipe, rocks,
driftwood, etc., can be used. They are cannibalistic if they are crowded or not provided with suitable
shelter and lots of food. They can pinch HARD, so be careful.

Compatibility with fish

Crayfish will try very hard to eat your fish. They will lay in wait until a fish swims through their open
claws, or if they have their tail curled up they can lunge forward a few inches to try to catch a fish. They
may climb up plants to go fishing near the surface. I've seen them watch food that is put into the tank
from a few inches away, and wait for fish to start eating it. Then they lunge forward to try to catch one.

I now have a single crayfish in a 10 gallon tank with White Cloud Minnows, feeder guppies, and a
Chinese Algae Eater. The crayfish ate some of the guppies but the survivors are keeping out of reach. '
She ate all of my Zebra Danios, and half of my White Clouds. The Chinese Algae Eater is much too
fast for her, and It even hides with the crayfish and sucks on her back. I'd recommend feeder guppies,
feeder goldfish, or minnows from a bait store (anything cheap).

In the past I kept a crayfish with common (feeder) goldfish, and the crayfish was not able to
successfully compete for food against the goldfish. I had to "hand" feed it with a pair of tongs. One day
I came home and the four goldfish (about 3" each without the tail) had eaten about half of the 4"
crayfish, and they had it well cleaned up by the next morning. I've also seen small goldfish get caught
and eaten within a few minutes. Do not keep a crayfish with a fancy goldfish or any fish that is slow
moving or has long fins. Do not keep them with Weather Loaches (Oojos), as they will lay on the
bottom of the tank and allow the crayfish to walk up and pinch them.

How to get a crayfish

Here in California Crayfish can be purchased from some pet shops or bait shops, or you can catch
them in the wild IF you purchase a fishing license or are under 18 years old. There is no season and
no limit.

Links with information on Crayfish

http://www.agualink.com/fresh/species.html

http://www.agualink.com/fresh/z-crayfish1.html

http://www.agualink.com/fresh/z-crayfish2.html

http://www.agualink.com/columns/k-crayfish.html

http://www.agualink.com/columns/k-craVfish1.html

http://www.agualink.com/columns/k-crayfish2.html

http://www.outdoortimes.com/1996/04/nale.html

htlp://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/NewCropsNews/91-1-1/crayfish.html

http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/NewCropsNews/94-4-1/crayfish.html

4/11/01 9:18 AM
of4
Facts The Grouchy Ladybug,

from whether she knows


it or not,
has a thing or tUJO

Fiction to say about


entomology,
natural selection,
comparative anatomy,
food chains, aphids, and
March 1988 Science and Children symbiotic relationships.
And that's a lot
Carol Bulzow, a former ttllCher, is a dodoral candidate at Indiana
University of Pennsylvania. John Butzow is assodate dean of college
for a storybook.
education at Indiana University. Both are also reading and science
consultants. Artwork reprinted from The Grouchy Ladybug, by
pennission of Harper and Row publishers.

v
II G O O d morning," said the friendly ladybug.
"Go away!" shouted the grouchy lady-
bug. "I want those aphids."
"We can share them," suggested the
friendly ladybug.
"No. They're mine, all mine," screamed the grouchy
ladybug.
In Eric Carle's picture book, the grouchy ladybug starts
her morning by picking a fight over the aphids _with the
friendly ladybug. She spends the rest of the day antagoniz-
ing progressively larger and larger animals such as a beetle,
a bird, a hyena, an elephant, and finally a whale. Lucky for
her, she doesn't have to fight any of them. She ends up vocabulary, and elicit dramatizations.
"wet, tired, and hungry," sharing the leaf and aphids with More than that, books like this deal with science and
the friendly ladybug at the end of the day. scientific concepts that can become the basis of a language
arts and reading and science program. The strong story line
in many of these books enables children to understand and
By Carol Butzow remember more scien tific concepts than they would by
using a science textbook. Some of these books can even be
and John Butzow used in social studies, math, and art units. Obviously, chil-
dren's literature offers more than simple pleasure.
The Grouchy Lndybug is exactly the sort of book that delights That Silly Ladybug
and amuses young children. Exactly the kind of book Young children do not think abstractly. If an adult
: "),ers assume is only entertaining. explains a scientific notion to a child in a realistic, adult
'\.....Attion for children isn't taken as seriously as nonfiction manner, the child often grows confused. He simply cannot
is in elementary school. But teachers are missing great edu- .understand the adult's reasoning. Stories and examples,
cational opportunities when they consider children's litera- however, that conform to a child's thought processes will
ture as supplemental at best. A book like The Grouchy Lndybug, have greater meaning to him. For instance, a child realizes
for example, can be the basis of classroom discussion. It can that it's silly for the ladybug to challenge the whale to fight.
also help a teacher assess her students' comprehension, The child recognizes instinctively the discrepancy in the
reinforce their reading and listening skills, increase their animals' sizes but wouldn't understand that what she was
grasping was comparative anatomy. 6. Keep a log of what the students observe about
Using children's literature to teach science is a part of the insects.
present movement to include specific reading and writing 7. Discuss the different animals in the book. How do thev
instruction in all areas. Reading and writing are as much a protect themselves? How do they move? -
part of a science program as they are a part of the language s. Invent animals. Ask the students how their animals~
program. Many educators, though, feel that children haven't move and protect themselves. .r )
been given specific lessons in writing and reading. "The 9. Research each of the anima1.s in the book and make up-
idea that reading instruction and subject matter instruction descriptive cards, showing each one's size, habitat, and eat-
should be integrated," reports the Commission on Reading, ing habits.
"is an old one in education. But there is little indication that
such integration occurs often in practice. The most logical Language Activities
place for instruction in most reading and thinking strate- 1. Before finishing the book-stop at the whale page-
gies is in social studies and science rather than in separate ask the class to predict the ending. Write down the new
lessons about reading." endings.
2 List the different words the author uses for meel.
000, That Grouchy Ladybug 3. Do a choral reading or dramatization of the book.
Tire Grouclry Lndybug easily integrates science and language 4. Write poems about the grouchy and the friendly
arts. Aside from the ladybug's belligerence, the book por- ladybugs. Use many contrasting adjectives.
trays animals protecting their environment. It even ends on _ 5. Have the students write about why the grouchy
the symbiotic relationship between ladybugs and leaves. ladybug changed her attitude at the end of the book.
"Soon all the aphids were gone. 'Thank you,' said the leaf. 6. Have the students draw personal timelines showing
'You are welcome,' answered both the ladybugs ...." where they are and what they are doing at each time
Each picture shows the passing of time with a clock face shown on the clocks in the book.
at the top and the Sun's position as it moves across the 7. Have the students tell the same story from one of the
horizon. Different animals are categorized and the food other creature's viewpoints, particularly the aphids'.
chain is outlined in a subtle way. The plot is simple, the
concepts realistic and verifiable. If nothing else, the book Social Studies Activities
will stimulate children to learn more about ladybugs. 1. Discuss why people and animals live in communities
To create an integrated science and language arts unit and why there are rules in these communities. Ask the
with The Grouchy lAdybug means that it will not be used class why there are rules against fighting in school. When
merely as a reading assignment. The children, after all, do you feel like fighting? What can you do when someone
'should read for information, ideas, insights, and entertain- wan ts to fight you?
ment Simultaneously, not just for the individual words. A 2. Locate the continents and oceans where the animals in~
well-written fictional book can serve as a source of creative the book live.
and effective science lessons for all students in the earlv 3. Find and discuss pictures of the different places the
elementary grades. - ladybug visits.
Using Tire Grouchy lAdybug as the pivot of an integrated
unit, consider the follo"Ving classroom activities. Art Activities
1. Have the students make ladybugs out of thumbprints
Science Activities or stones.
1. Study the pictures of the ladybug. Draw a large picture 2. Have the students make masks or costumes so they
of the ladybug and label the body parts and functions. can look like their favorite animal from the book.
2. Set up a sundial on the playground and mark the
shadow length to correspond with the clock faces in the Music Activities
book. 1. Listen to the classical music scores Carnival of the Animals
3. How many hours does the book cover? Is that a whole by Saint-Saens, Swan lAke by Tchaikovsky, and Peter and the
day? Why do we have day and night? Discuss A.M. and P.M. Wolf by Prokofiev.
What is the difference between a digital and an analog .2. Ask the children to do interpretive dances to the music
clock? . that reminds them of the way the animals in the book
4. If the students have not yet mastered telling time, move.
work on those skills.
5. Make bug houses and then sweep-net the school yard
or a wooded area to collect insects for studying in the
classroom.

Resources
Anderson, Robert, et al. (1984). Becoming a nation of readers: Tlrt
report of the commission on reading. Washington, DC: U.~
Department of Education. , ,
Bettleheim, Bruno. (1977). The useS of enchantment. New York:-
Alfred A. Knopf.
Bybee, Rodger W., and Sund, Robert B. (1982). Piagel for
educators. Columbus: Charles Merrill. .
Goodman, Kenneth. (1986). What's whole in whole language.
Portsmouth, NH: He~nemann Educational Books.
Insect investigations
Subject Concepts
SCience.

Science skills
Observing. describing. classifying.

Focus
There are more insects in the city than any other type of critter. They are easy-
to-find examples of antmal adaptation to habitat. Because of their adaptations.
insects are often found in very spec1flc places within their habitat. What
Insects can you find buzzing, crawling, hopping, or ilylng In great green spaces
near you?

Did you know?


Insects are found Just about everywhere. but some ~
might be hard to see because they are camouflaged. \' \ '.:\ \
The oleander moth has a color pattern that blends (\ I .~ . ,
in with the bark of a tree where it rests during I ~~ -.... " ~ ~'~I~~l't'l~,::':"-,.
the day. Its coloration makes It hard for ~-- ~:-.. ,,~
u.'. \'1
daytime predators to see It. Camouflage can 1 . I~
also help predators hide. The shape and color - ~' ,I rU" . - ~
u of the praying mantis allows It to blend in with
greenery while waiting to snatch an insect
: ~
' ' ' . ,. :\ ~~
... ~

that flies by. Habitat adaptations like these ",",''''~


give insects a survival advantage. 7 10 I
! rj?' ~.

What you need Praying mantie with ite prey


For each person:
Q 2 clear plastic cups (8-oz. size)
Q Scissors
Q Mesh or netting
Q A rubber band
Q Pencn
Q Insect Investigations ActtVity Sheet
Q White sheets (can be shared)
Q White plastic tubs (can be shared)

Before you start


Q An entomologtst studies insects. All adult insects have: siX legs, three body
parts (head. thorax. abdomen), two antennae. and most have one or two
pairs of wings.
Q Be careful when handling insects. Some bite or sting to defend themselves.
V Q Many Insects are fragile; take care not to damage legs. wings, or antennae.

Chapter 3
Two Segments' in Waist (Poneroid Complex)
P(lnIInom v rl11u( harvester
-:r"
tints)
~'. lar~ red·, _. _.... a n t s . . usua11y clear v~tation around nest
.. beard of long hoirs (psommophore) unmr hMi .........
ei-
."

emonomorphic (workers only come in one si2e) ~----------~___


J
, -,.
-<. :,' Alia (leaf-cutter ants) " \. (,:C; .;~:;:: or~;.".': ...• " "" .....:<..;
l~-'." Lorge to very smell, grow fungus from~cut leaves,' nests otten 10-:-20 ft
deep cannot stinQ -' ~ 9i':~' , "
~ ;',','; ~,:. :.:~:-,
across
~e~ jUst 8S -'. :;
!¥."V''1 ~ '. --:;: ~,' :~Q.J., .
'.1

-top of thorax with 3 pairs'of spines ~ '. :';,~ '.'~': '. :;~:' ".,- ". ~ . .'~ .. " ~':H>'
IICOntinuously polymorphicJ workers come in al1 sizes) ~ ~.
eentenna with' , segments ~'-- ". '. '. ,..
u t#,

~
t 1
.
Soicnop3i:l (F ire cnts) '.. .", • - . '. . . ... ".
'medium to small ~ized. large eart~en .m~unds, sti(lgS ~~\
HWor~~wlth 10-segmented_~!ennle, .. I '.~'>
eoo splnes on bn end of thorax ' .' :,) .
e2-segmented entennal club./ \ -:1
econtinuously polymorphic"( workers come in al1 sizes
I f " s-wlt. - , ... VI ,,-fa. ej
Pheidole t -biQ-~ ants-) ,
smell to very smell, many species, cermot sting .
Hdimorphic, big-hesBi soldiers and small oormall00king workers, similar to the
tropicel fire en! ·in eppeerence except usually smaHer end not continuously
polymorphic . 2J·
el2-segmented antenna).3 - ~J"'''/\.1e..l·du/' ~,

/fonomorilllll (-little bJ~ ants-)


very smtiH, U5ut»l1y bltlCk (except Phm'rOO's tint). usmlly 00 not sting
e12-segmented antenna .
ebeclc' of thor~ rounded, without spines
emon,omorphic (wa'kers only amle in one si2e)
CremalOfl8SIer ( -bark ants-)
often found in w[XXJ or UncEr bark
"petiole joins to top"of gaster ;;;:.~~~
..gaster som~hot heart-shaped with 0 pointed end & ~~ ~ e
emonomorphlc (workers only come in one size) ~
One Segment in Waist (Myrmeciod Comp1ex)
Conomyrml1 (crezy ants)
medium-smal1ants,oiten run in rapid loops, nest entrances often have a 2-3 inch pile ~~
di rt around them ,_commonly found aloog tb~ roads! ~nno~ 5t in~
Hsingle cone-I iKe point in mjaUe of b~k
-workers smel11ike blue cheese when crushed
emonomorphic (workers only come in one size)
_ ~ /"
( ()
~
...~ "
'y''.J\
.-- . /?
I~
--
'{
Fore/ius ("blue cheese ants·)
very small, oftan yellowish, workers usu1511y run quickly along trails in 18r~ numbers,
cannot sting
eworkers smelllike blue cheese when crushElt ~
.petio.lar segment very small and often hiaEn unOOr gaster .
emonomorphic ( worke~ on Iy OJme in one sjze) 0

Pllrolrcchil1l1 ("bristle ants")


very small t sim~l~ to Forelius except OOo't smell when crushed, cannot sting
ebcdf covered stout dark bristles
.monomorphic (workers only come in one size)

Campono/us (carpenter ants)


medium.Jo lerge.~tst many kinds live ~n wood, QIIlnot.sJfng .:
..top of l~8X is ev~ly roun~ when viewed from the si
emntinuously polYmorphic ( workers arne in aJ1si?eS) .

,....
4. :
...
:.' .:,.' ~ i ' . . •: ••:;: ' .
,,/~ .........
'.

' .
•• J

., .
.....
.,


Directions: Find each of the numbered traits on several specimens of each
spec1es.
Red Imported Fire Ant (SolenoplS Invlcta)
Tall distinct mounds In spring and fall
u Major Workers .
1. Heed of ncrmal ~ end proportions .
2. urania, of petio1e with at most I small r.ctch . \'.
3. four teeth on mandibles tJ \ j
~. No tBeth aboYe base of front lea
I1lnor 'Nurkera
~ ~
(9
c~
1. No teeth above ba5e of front lea ·
2. Antennal ~ long, reaches or u~ top arner of heed
3. centrel pointed taJIh on ebave mllldlbles". Ii (,
Tropical Fire Ant (SOlentJl)SlsgemlnataJ' ~.
Similar to red imported fire ant~ except for the large-headed majors and
. mounds are usually lower
Major Workers
I.
2.
Heaj dlsproporU_tv 1~ and bt~H
Undersic2 of petiole with at mast I small notch
-
b)
~.

3. MandiblesstrmQlvcurvai.blunt ....'M·wtthout teeth-..,


~. R . irregular teeth ebave base II frant 1egII*
5. Majors with Jf~t red brown hea .,
t1 tnor Workers . .
I. One or two r_lrreoular tEth above base of front 1t!Q**
2. AntennaJ s:epe long, reeches or . , . , . tap ar. . of heed
. 3. no central tmJth on c1ypeus above IDMdIbles . t~~ f,.('o
t~ ._J...._~ ~
. ~~,,-~ ~

u Southern Fire Ant (Solenops/s XY/(JfII).


Nests usually lower than the imported species, workers less aggress1ve
~~ &. '-Illa~JI

"ajor Worters

.
I. Head of normal shepe end proportin
2. Underside of petiole with a distinct
3. Mendibles with 3 teeth end a small natdl-
tDath*H\:A~
u.4« ~
4. No teeth ebove base of front leg
5. Heed end thorax uniform Wk cnngD bOIl~~ ~
"'''''~-T
'---- J ./
tlinor Worters . . I.

1.. No teeth ebove be of front leg .JI*I'f..,


2. AntennaJ ~ ~ •DB oot'~ arner It,.
3. no tooth ... an clypill above mandibles ,
Desert Fire Ant (So/enOpsls atria)· ..
SmalJlsh untrormJy orange ants. nests small diffuse, orten under kS,
workers rather timid, fOUnd only west or Austin
·nljar Worters .
I. Heed 0( normal shepe end proportlans ..
2. Underside of petfole wn"
a keel Itb taJth. /V1
3. Four teeth on mendib1es '- ~
4. No teeth eboYe base 01 front leg ",,--,'
Black Imported Fire Ant (So/enopslsrIChterl)
Not found in Texas .
Very similar to t.be red fmport81 (fre ent except e darker ~ mlcr and 8 dark orange
spot on gBSter of major wcrters
Ihe l::Sug -I-hat Changed History Page 1 of2

The Bug That Changed History

Surprise Valley. July. You're running sweep on the Tapeats/Thunder RiverlDeer Creek
hike. Conversation at the back of the pack is running something like this: "We're surprised
all right. We're surprised how hot and dry and stupid it is up here!" Yep, they're suffering
from heat frustration, and you're still miles away from the boats at Deer Creek. Resting at
the Big Shade Rock, the glum crunching of a granola bar is the only sound. You think: "I
need to divert attention away from blistered feet, achy joints, and sunburns. I need a long,
entertaining story." Tell them the tale of the cochineal insect, a bug that changed world
history.

The cochineal is found in many Colorado River side canyons, appearing on prickly pear
cactus pads inside matchhead-sized white fuzzballs. When you fmd some of these, car~fully
pull one off. Go ahead and mash it. The brilliant red insect bodies now staining your
fingertips have been processed by New World cultures for thousands of years, and used to
color everything from warriors' shields to their own bodies. By the 14th century, the Incas
and Aztecs both had whole agricultural systems based on cochineal, and apparently valued
the dye as much as gold.

At the same time in Europe, the best red colorings were made from another insect, a pest
of oak trees called kermes, which was dried, ground up and dissolved in water. Neolithic
cave paintings in France, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the wrappings of Egyptian mummies
were all tinted with this dye. Compared to cochineal however, kermes tints look dull and
faded. So when Cortes invaded Mexico in 1519, he was amazed to fmd Montezuma and
other nobles dressed in robes dyed a brilliant, vivid red. He was also amazed to see the
native women's hands and breasts painted the same intense color. In Tenochtitlan (now
Mexico City) he found bags of dried cochineal sent as tribute to Montezuma, which were
promptly shipped back to Spain. The dye was so much brighter than kermes it was almost
instantly in high demand. By 1600, cochineal was second only to silver as the most valuable
import from Mexico.

Around 1630, it was discovered that treating cochineal with an acidic tin solution made it
bind much better to fabric and even brighter in color, the first scarlet as we now know it.
Because of its expense and scarcity, scarlet cloth quickly became associated with money and
power. Roman Catholic Card Cardinals robes were made from it as were the jackets of the
British military.

The Revolutionary War in which American colonists fought against these "Redcoats" was
brought on not only by British taxes on tea, but also by heavy taxes on cochineal, which
could easily have been imported directly from Mexico by the Colonies.

In addition to dye for fabric, cochineal became widely used as a food coloring. Cakes,
cookies, beverages, jam, jelly, ice cream, sausages, pies, dried fish, yogurt, cider,
maraschino cherries and tomato products were brightened with it as were chewing gum,
pills and cough drops. Cosmetic rouge was developed with cochineal as the main ingredient.
, But while ever more diverse uses were found for cochineal, it's origin remained a mystery.
V
Most Europeans thought it was extracted from berries or cereals because the dried insects

http://www.gcrg.org/bqr/8-2/bug.htm 7/29/2005
'l'h~ Hug 'I'hat Changed History Page 2 of2

looked like grains of wheat. This misconception was promoted by the Spanish, who had
launched a brutal cover-up of the dye making process as soon as they realized cochineal's
potential. Many New World natives unfortunate enough to have chosen a career in red dye "~
production were simply put to death. Access to cochineal farms was tightly controlled, but
eventually French and Dutch adventurers succeeded in smuggling out live cactus pads
covered with the insects. Cochineal "ranches" were started in dozens of countries in North
Africa, the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. Prickly pear and cochineal did particularly
well in the Canary Islands where whole farms and vineyards were cleared and converted to
cactus plantations. In 1868, the Canaries exported six million pounds of cochineal,
equivalent to 420 billion insects.

This time period proved to be the peak of the cochineal industry as new synthetic dyes in a
variety of fade-resistant colors rapidly superseded it. By the 1880s cochineal production was
in steep decline. A major crisis in Spanish financial markets ensued, as a key 250 ye~-old
industry failed within the span of a couple of decades.

Though not in high demand today, cochineal is used in medical tracers, artists' paints' and
microscopy stains. It is currently the only natural red food coloring authorized by the FDA.
Unfortunately, workers harvesting cochineal now are not much safer than those laboring
under the Spanish 200 years ago. The world's primary growing area, Peru, is threatened by
ongoing political instability and violence. Conditions are so sketchy that the insects are
usually gathered at night. Revealing where his concerns lay, one cochineal importer noted:
"There's high mortality in working staff right now, so supplies are a bit tight."

By now, if you've dragged the story out adequately, the boats should be in sight. If so,
wrap up your tale on this note: as food producers continue to switch back to natural
colorings, more and more of the stuffwe eat and drink will be dyed with dead bugs. But at.
least the red color won t have originated as some awful synthetic brew in a General Foods
chemistry lab.

Jeff Behan

http://www.gcrg.orglbqr/8-2Ibug.htm 7/29/2005
,=n'..... .
&;;> - - - ••• - - - .1Q.!:)t- J. U.1 .1

EnchantedLearning.com S'hrimp Name:


--------------------------
u ·.Shri.mp Carapace
(shielding·the
Compound
eye
Abdomen /I head and thorax) I

Translucent
exoskeleton

5 pairs of
swimmerets
(pleopod)
Telson
@EnohantedLearning.oom

Shrimp are small animals that live on the floor of oceans and lakes. There are over 2,000
different species of shrimp worldwide. Shrimp are invertebrates (animals lacking a
backbone) that have a tough exoskeleton.

" Anatomy: Shrimp range from a small fraction of an inch to 9 inches (a few mm to 23 cm)
. long. These crustaceans have a thin, smooth, hard, and almost transparent exoskeleton.
U Shrimp vary Widely in color; tropical varieties are often brightly colored. Shrimp have 5
pairs of jointed walking legs on the thorax, and they have 5 pairs of swimming legs
(swimmerets) and 3 pairs of maxillae (feeding appendages) on the abdomen. The body, legs,
swimmerets, and other appendages are segmented. Shrimp have two pairs of segmented
sensory antennae, a tail fan, and compound eyes.

Diet: Shrimp are omnivores; they eat plants and small animals. The unusual pistol shrimp
kills or stuns its prey by making a very loud sound with a huge claw with a moveable,
snapping appendage.

Life Cycle: Female shrimp layover a thousand eggs, which are attached to her swimming
legs. The shrimp emerge as tiny, floating organisms, a component of zooplankton. After
growing, they sink to the bottom, where they will live. As a shrimp grows, it often molts
(losing its old shell and growing a new one).

Predators: Shrimp are eaten by many animals, including many fish, many birds (including
flamingos and loons), octopi, squid, cuttlefish, and people.

Classification: Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Arthropoda, Class Crustacea (crustaceans),


Subclass Malacostraca, Order Decapoda, Suborder Natantia.

U Copyright ©2000-2006 EllchantedLeaming.com

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"".... "" ..........- _..- - - ' - - - - : , 0 .- - - .

EnchantedLearning.com -CRAB"
~ ;:'S
~ . '; . Name:
--------------------------
U
Cra,b

® ZoomSchool.com

Crabs are IO-legged animals that walk sideways. There are almost 5,000 different species of
\ crabs; about 4,500 are true crabs, plus about 500 are hermit crabs (hermit crabs don1t have a
·' very hard shell and use other animalsl old shells for protection). Most crabs live in the
U oceans, but many, like the robber crab, live on land.
The Biggest Crabs: The biggest crab is the Japanese Spider crab (Macrocheira kaempferi),
which lives on the floor of the north Pacific Ocean; it has a 12 ft (3.7 m) leg span. The
biggest land crab is the Coconut crab (Birgus latro), which lives on islands in the Pacific
Ocean; it has a leg span up to 2.5 ft (75 ~m).

Diet: Many crabs are omnivores (plant- and meat-eaters), others are carnivores (meat-
eaters), and some are herbivores (plant-eaters).

Anatomy: Crabs are invertebrates, animals without a backbone. They have an exoskeleton
(also called a carapace), an outer shell that both protects them from predators and provides
support. These crustaceans have ten jointed legs, two of which have large, grasping claws
(called pincers or chelipeds). They have a flattened body, two feelers (antennae), and two
eyes located at the ends of stalks.

Breathing: Marine crabs breathe underwater using gills, which are located in a two cavities
under the carapace. True land crabs have enlarged, modified cavities that act like lungs so
that the land crabs can breathe air.

U Copyright © 1999-2006 EnchantedLearning.com

http://members.enchantedleaming.com/subj ects/Crab.shtml?p 11/3/2006 '


EnchantedLeaming.com

U
Hermit Crab Label :HERMIT Name:
Me! Printout
·" '.'S --------------------------
CRAB
.
'
.I . • i
~
'.

Hermit Crab The hennit crab is a type of crab that


doesn't have a very hard shell. Not a true
crab, it uses other animals' old shells for
protection; they especially like old whelk
shells. As the hermit crab grows in size,
it must find a larger shell.

The hennit crab is a crustacean; there are


about 500 different species of hermit
crabs around the world. Most hennit crab
species live on the ocean floor, but many
live on land. Female terrestrial (land
based) hermit crabs must return to the sea
Soft. twisted to breed.
abdomen
hidden Hard shell that is An~tomy:
Hermit crabs are
inside shell temporarly used by
the hermit crab invertebrates, animals without a
@EnchantedLearning.com
U backbone. They have an exoskeleton, an
outer shell that provides support for their body but does not provide much protection from
, predators. They vary widely in color, from red to brown to purple, with stripes, dots, and
other patterns. They have ten jointed legs; the front two legs have large, grasping claws
(called pincers' or chelipeds) and the rear pair of legs are very small. They have a flattened
body, sensory antennae, two eyes located at the ends of stalks, and a soft, twisted abdomen
(which the hermit crab keeps hidden inside its shell). '

Diet: Hermit crabs are omnivores (eating plants and animals) and scavengers (eating dead
animals that they fmd). They eat worms, plankton, and organic debris.

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EnchantedLeaming.com ~Crayfish Name:
-----------------------------
Cephalothor.ax
Cra.yfish
u Lon~ antennae

®Enchantedl.eaming .com

Crayfish are crustaceans that are also known as crawdads, crawfish, and freshwater lobsters; they are
closely related to lobsters, crabs, and shrimp. There are about 150 crayfish species in North America,
and over 540 species worldwide.

Crayfish live in streams, rivers, swamps, ponds, and other freshwater habitats. Most crayfish are strictly
aquatic but some live in semi-aquatic environments. The semi-aquatic crayfish burrow into the soil to
get to water (so that they can breathe).

u Anatomy: This crustacean has a hard exoskeleton that protects and supports the body. The crayfish has
8 jointed walking legs, a segmented body, 2 pairs of sensory antennae, and compound eyes. It has 2
large pincers or claws called chelipeds. If a crayfish loses a leg, the leg will regenerate (regrow). The
head and thorax are fused, forming the cephalothorax. Using gills, a crayfish breathes oxygen that is
dissolved in water. Juvenile crawfish are light tan, but adults are deep red. Their color also depends on
diet. As a crayfish grows, it often molts (loses its old shell and grows a new one). It eats the old shell.
Crawfish in North America range from 2 to 6 inches (5-15 cm) long; Australian crawfish are larger.

Diet: Crayfish are omnivores; they eat plants, animals, and de~aying organisms. They are nocturnal
(most active at night) and eat fish, shrimp, water plants, worms, insects, snails, and plankton. Larval
crayfish are very tiny; they eat plankton.

Predators: Many animals eat crayfish, including fish (like eel, trout, pike, chub, perch), herons, mink,
otters, snakes, and people. .

Copyright ©2000-2006 EnchantedLearning.conl

http://members.enchantedleaming.com!subjects/invertebrates/crustaceanlCrayfishprintout....11/3/2006
Enehmrte'f' 'fm"ing.com
Name:
CeDtipede ---------------------------
u
Centipede

Antennae ..
'
.......
CS>EnchantedLearnI ng.com ,.'

Question: What goes 99 clunk? Answer: A centipede with a wooden leg.

Despite their name (which means" 100 legs"), centipedes do not all have 100 legs.
Centipedes are fast-moving, carnivorous, venomous invertebrates. They have a hard
U. exos~eleton and ~ointed leg~. They ~ive on land in moi~t microh~bitats .(under rocks and
. ·logs, m leaf debI'l~~ or occaSIonally m burrows). A common centipede IS the house
centipede, Scutigerajorceps, which is about 2 inches (5 cm) long and has 15 pairs of legs.
Some centipedes (like Geophilus electricus) glow in the dark.

Anatomy: Centipedes have a flattened, segmented body, long antennae, and many legs
(each leg is slightly longer than the one in front of it). Centipedes have from 15 to about 177
segments (but most have about 15). Each body segment has a pair of legs that stick out from
the sides. A member of the genus Geophilus has 177 pairs of legs. When a leg is cut off it
will regenerate. The body is divided into two parts, the head and a segmented trunk. They
breathe through spiracles, holes positioned along the body.

Diet: Centipedes are carnivores (meat-eaters) that use venom to kill their prey. The venom
comes from glands that open near the first pair of modified legs (which act as poisonous
fangs). Their bite can be painful to a human but not lethal. Centipedes eat insects,
earthworms, spiders, slugs, and other small animals. The largest centipede, Scolopendra
gigas (from Trinidad in the West Indies), also eats mice and some small lizards.
Scolopendra gigas grows to be about 10 inches (25 cm) long and 1 inch wide.

Enemies: Birds, toads, and shrews eat centipedes, as do some people.

\.JReproduction': The average female centipede lays 60 sticky eggs (which are fertilized

http://members.enchantedlearning.comlsubjects/invertebrates/arthropod/Centipede.shtm1?p 11/3/2006
Drterna]1y). She drops the eggs into a hole she digs in the soil. Some centipedes care for their
eggs and the hatchlings.

Classification: Kingdom Animalia (animals), Phylum Arthropoda Gointed legs and an


exoskeleton), Superclass Myriapoda ("many-footed" with a2-segmented body, including
millipedes, centipedes, etc.), Class Chilopoda (centipedes). About 20 families and 3,000
species of centipedes have been described.

Copyright ©2001-2006 EnchantedLearning.com

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Enchmt-edI,eaming.com
Name:
1\JRH~,
..1. "iiuJJ.p~e --------------------------
u
:MilHpe'de Trunk

·1 Collum
Rounded
head
Eye
Most body segments
have 2 pairs of legs
(diplosomltes);
somltes .have one
pair of legs
Sternltes
Labrum Mandible III, .• ®EnchentedLeerni ng.com

Despite their name (which means "thousand legs"), millipedes do not have 1,000 legs - they
have from 47to 197 pairs of legs, depending on the species. Millipedes are invertebrates;
they have a hard exoskeleton and many jointed legs.

U Millipedes live on land in moist microhabitats (under rocks, in rotting logs, in leaf debris, or
occasionally in burrows). "

Anatomy: Millipedes have a segmented body, short antennae, and many legs. Most body
segment have two pairs of legs that stick out from the sides of the body (each segment is
really 2 segments fused together). The segments that have two pair of legs are called
diplosomites. The frrst few segments have only one pair of legs; they are called somites. The
second-to-Iast'segment has no legs. The last segment is called the anal segment; it is where
waste (in the form of pellets) leaves the body. Most millipedes have from 25 to 100
segments (47 to 197 pairs of legs). The legs move in a wave-like motion.

The body is divided into two parts, the head and a segmented trunk. Millipedes breathe
through spiracles, holes positioned in paris along the body. The top of each segment is called
the tergite (or tergum); the underside (between the pairs of legs) is called the stemite (or
sternum). Millipedes have poor to no vision. Millipedes range in size from a fraction of an
inch to about 9 inches (23 cm) long.

Diet: Most millipedes are herbivores (plant-eaters) that eat dead and decaying plant material,
but a few are also carnivores (meat-eaters). Millipedes also occasionally eat moist, living
plants. They are often nocturnal (more active at night).

U Enemies: Birds, badgers, and shrews eat millipedes. "When they are in danger, millipedes

http://members.enchantedlearning.comJsubjects/invertebrates/arthropodIMillipede.shtml?p 11/3/2006
J. _. - - - ..• -- ... - - . . . - . . . . . . - -..................... , , 'C·..,V.&..L.l l"age20f2

cm1 up in a spir.al, protecting their soft undersides. They can also spray a bad-smeJUng liquid
(hydrocyanic acid) that repels ~ predators.

Reproduction-: Millipedes hatch from eggs - hatchlings have only the first three pairs of
legs. There is some maternal care of the eggs. Millipedes molt (shed their old exoskeleton)
as they grow - with each molt they gain more segments and legs.

Classification: K.in~dom Animalia (animals), Phylum Arthropoda Gointed legs and an


exoskeleton), Superclass Myriapoda (tlmany-footed" with a 2-segmented body - millipedes,
centipedes, etc.), Class Diplopoda (millipedes). About 7,500 species of millipedes have been
described.

Copyright ©200 1-2006 EnchantedLearning.com

.' ,.

http://members.enchantedleaming.comJsubjects/invertebrates~arthropodlMillipede.shtm1?p 11/3/2006
u

u
· .

~:~SLA
~, "5 "
Tht:re are rnany jdnas of bee:s !f1 the vvodd . One k~nc1 ~::.
~l::. n:
"rh'
I. 1~, ",,(; ~ iJ~,-". Tnl. e"-e a·r.s::. thr:&,J..fl
f ('j.~e·yL..a~ If,,\- ~f..... ~.yr.'
- ........ ~ ~f n' O~H:"'t1""H:";:
'j.·HI'"\oeS 'WI,.JJ,... -.. ~_..•
....... l.

qu~~en!wort.;.er, and circtne. The queen is a very ~mportant


.. one Hves in f;·ac:h hive. The vv{)rker bf.;;€;s ~trlt~
bee and 051tV

..- ., • .... ~ • t... • S • b


t:.acn type or honeybee ~~a5 spec.:ta~ JO $:

\Norf<er
• Lays eggs, up to • Builds the hive • Mates with
1,500 in one day the Queen
8 Cleans and guards the hive
e Keeps the worker e Keeps the
• Takes care of the queen
bees calm worker bees
It Feeds all the bees happy
tt Cares for young bees.
• Collects pollen and nectar
from flowers
• Makes honey for food
u Honey Bee Hive Observation Log

1. How many bees can you count in 1 square inch?


How many bees do you think are in this hive?

2. How many bees do you see doing a "pollen dance"?


Why do you think they do that?

3. Do you see bees going in and out of cells?


Why do you think they do that?

4. Do you see bees flapping their wings?


Why do you think they do that?

u
5. Do you see bees coming into th~
Why do you think they do that?

.-+ v '\J-<-
6. Do you see bees going out of the-eeRe?
Why do you think they do that?

7. Do you see a worker bee?

8. Do you see a drone?

9. Do you see the queen?

10. What do the bees make inside their hive?


• During a single meal, a female mosquito can drink her own weight in
u blood.
• Some mayflies live 24 hours or less as adults.
• The smallest insect ever discovered is a hairy-winged beetle from the
tropics. It measures 1/100 of an inch (.25 mm) in length.
• The longest insect ever found is a tropical stick insect from Asia. Some
of the females get to be over a foot (30 cm) long.
• Over one million different kinds of insects have been discovered. This
is twice the total of all other kinds of animals put together.
• A swarm of desert locusts (of the grasshopper family), containing over
1000 million insects, has covered an estimated area of 2000 square
mil~ (5200 km 2). Swarms of locusts have been seen at sea 1200 miles
from land (1920 km}.
• Bombardier beetles can shoot a hot, smelly liquid from their abdomen
that is 2120 F (1000 C).
• Fireflies aren't the only light-producing insects.' Some click beetles,
springtails, and gnats also light up.
. • There is a fly in California called the petroleum fly that lives and breeds
in petroleum.
• The largest animal in Antarctica that lives strictly on land is a wingless
fly less than 1/4 of an inch (6 mm) long.
u • The color a head louse will be as an adult can depend on the color of
the person's hair it is living in. For example, a louse living in blond hair
would most likely be a light color; one living in black hair would be dark.
• A cockroach can live nine days without its head. .
• Fleas can jump 200 times the length of their bodies.
• Some queen termites live as long as 50 years .
• The atlas moth of India is one of the world's largest insects.
It measures 12 inches (30 em) from wingtip to wingtip.
-. A tiny insect called a biting midge can beat its wings
1000 times a second.

54
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: ',' .~ . ~

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kiddyhouse.com : All about snails fOT kids and teachers http://www.kiddyhouse.comlSnailS1snail.hrmi

u All About Snails


To print. right click on 'page and click print

Characteristics of snails.
Do vou know where the snail's eves are?
What and how does a snail eat?
How big can the snail grow?
How does the snail move?
l\tlale or female?
Life Historv of the snail
The snails have enemies too
Pond Snails
How do thev breathe in water?
Do vou know that Dond snails can be eaten?
What does the pond snail feed on ?
How does the pond snail reproduce?
Related Snail activities & worksheets
More snail facts & activities

Garden Snails
Characteristics of Snails
u
Snails can be found in gardens, in ponds and even in the sea. They belong
to a group of animals with a soft body called molluscs (mollusks) which
are related to oysters, clams, and other shellfish. Characteristically they
have soft, unsegmented bodies. Nonnally, their soft bodies are protected
by a hard shell. The scientific name for the snail is Helix aspersa. It is a
gastropod which in latin means, gastro for stomach and pod for foot. The
body of the snail is long, moist and slinlY. It has a shell to protect its soft
body. When the snail is disturbed, it sinlply withdraws or pulls itself back
into its shell. ft1lie1SfOO!lf!'ilSQ§i~Hiiiw"Hii':i"I'sne];]:{iiiiijf[Seals\lther,~n~iliiY
llii:~eatR¢jr,;',t~.Jit(e&~li.ii;i1lf0iii~~-B\¥) A snail is most active at
night and on cloudy days. It does not like the sunshine very much. During
very cold weather or winter, it hibernates in the ground.

Snai Is have different shaped shells. It can be a single shell that is rounded,
spiral high and pointed or it can be flat.

Some people keep snails in aquariums together with their fish. Ho\vever,
they must make sure that they control the number because snails reproduce
rapidly!!

Snails do not like hot and dry conditions. They like it moist or humid and
not too bright. You can collect some snails and put them into a transparent
container. Put some leaves in it, keep it Inoist and you can observe and see

lof7 4/23/01 9:38 AM


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how a snail nloves and also its mouth part.

u
Do you kno\v \,'here the snail's eyes are '?

Yes. the eye is on the tip of the tentacles. The snails


has hvo pairs of tentac les on its head. One pair is
longer than the other pair. The eyes are on the longer
pair. The shorter pair is used for smelling and feeling
its \vay around. The tentacles are very important to a snail.

What and how does a snail eat?

A snail have something called a radula in its mouth for grinding up its
food. This radula is like a rough tongue, something like a file \vith rows of
tiny teeth which it uses to scrap off leaves and flo\vers to eat. Many people
get upset and fanners get angry when snails eat their plants and crops.
Snails can cause serious damage to crops. Snat!lsfiitrmo'BtJi'Wiiiiiug'ifd'iiitS
G,@§1W,e! l%.Q,wd¢C8. ,'nfjilptiiitS&1They also chew on fruits and young succulent
'
plant barks.

HOlV big can the snail gro\v ?

u The largest known land snail nwned Gee Geroninlo was a Giant African
Snail collected in Sierra Leone in 1976. It weighed about 2lb (900g) and
measured over 15 inches (39.3cm) from snout to tail.

..--If'1~~ Ho\v does the snail move?

The snail moves by creeping on a flat "foot"


underneath the body. lliUlISiiiifJkriiiij;mascle$)M!i!_
fifQ,Qt!JcalltraAAf.and:1o:.'expandA81iJ.al:~thlsi:':e~at~:I.~!(lQfl'i1\9)f
WiD'li:ngi'rn~;V~~~n~'j'~bAA(PUSheshtliiHmij!lYfQnwarjy
The "foot" has a special gland that produces a
slimy mucus to make a slippery track. You can often see these silvery
track~ in the garden. The slime comes out from the front and hardens when
it comes into contact with air. The snail is able to nlove on very sharp
pointed needles, knife, razors and vines without being injured because the
mucus-like secretion helps to protect its body.

Look at how the snail wraps its soft body around the branch so that it will
not fall off,

Male or female?

u The snail is both male and female. Therefore, it can produce sperms and
eggs at the same time ! Isn't that incredible? However, to fertilize the
eggs, the snails need to exchange sperms with each other. An animal

20f7
4/230 I 9:38 AM
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which is both a male .and a female is called a herillaphrodite. The brown


garden snail lays about 80 ~pherical shaped white ot yellowish colored
eggs at a time into the topsoii of the ground. It can lay eggs up to six times
u a year.(Stla1:lSytdeiQoilt>2hY@IiSstwffi oodimliiIJItw.

Life History of ~he snail


.!)?';"~1~i';;o;;'}:f;~:i:, Snails spend many hours courting before they mate.
They twist themselves around each other and cover
"c.' ......

themselves in frothy slime. After mating, each snail


will go search for a soft ground to dig and lay its
eggs. The snail lay its eggs in a nest, 2.5 to 4 cm
deep in the soil. Each snail can lay an average of 85
eggs and theyQiatAA&itt&'Altf01/31kilii-», depending on
the temperature and moisture of the soil. The eggs
are concealed with a mixture of soil and mucus.
They are then covered with excrement. Low temperatures of less than 12C
and low humidity inhibits laying eggs. Snails lay eggs most often during
the warm and damp weather. It can be as often as once a month or every 6
weeks. Their most active nl0nths are from February to October.

The first thing that a newly hatched snail does is to find food. It \vill eat
\vhatever that is left of its eggshell too. It will also eat any eggs that have
not hatched yet. As the snail grows, its shell grows too in a spiral shape.
The new shell is added at the opening of the shell. The part of the shell the
u baby snail was born with, ends up in the middle of the spiral.

The snails have enemies too

Snails have many natural enemies. They are the ground beetles, snakes,
toads, turtles, and birds including chickens, ducks and geese.

POND SNAILS
It is fun to play in the country. If you come across a pond in the country,
you win find animals like fish, prawns, insects and the pond snail. The
pond snail is, in many ways like the garden snail. Pond snails are usually
tan or dark brown in color.

How do they breathe in "vater?

Some pondtsnaiIS$a'te}gUtsno breathe in water. Those with gills \vill live


at the bottom of the pond. Those that do not have gills, will come up to the
surface to breathe. These snails will live on the surface so that they can
come up to breathe easily.

Do you know that pond snails can be eaten ?

You can buy pond snails from a fish monger in the city. The flesh of the

30f7 4/23/0 I 9:38 AM


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snail is very delicious. The French people especiaIIy, love to eat snails.
One important thing .to remember here is to make sure that you clean and
rinse the pond snails \vith plenty of clean water to wash away the dirt and
mud.

What does the eond snail feed on ?


The ~sni.jllt;\f&miil::majn·l~pUiji"fs'J.;11ikewargaeWjija:rjim.jCifQsc0pj·CKGre8tfijre#
that are found on the surface of water weeds. They eat by scraping bits off
with their rough tongue just like the garden snails.

Ho\-v does the pond snail reproduce?

The pond snail reproduces just like the garden snail. It


is a hermaphrodite. The only difference is that, unlike
the garden snail, meI1;oiiiti!'stlatIIrlGam:es\ilt$M'f!mlie;
~m. The baby snail will only leave its mother
when it is hatched.

Ho\-v to collect pond snails '?

First of all, you will need a spade, fishing net, a container (to put your
snails in). Make sure your container is not air tight so that the snails can
breathe. You can do this by nlaking tiny holes on the lid. You need a lid to
cover your container because snails can crawl on any texture or surface.
u Choose a damp spot near the pond and then use your spade to loosen the
ground and you will find many snails just beneath the surface.

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.Snail Related Actjvities·


.. "- --';':-;;",~.;':!--':'-;.:'.":: . .;: .. -~.- ': . .:.... -;--.,;:<- ..~ ..... -:": .-. ~

An original story ofSlimv the Snail

Storytime Books about snails


Reviews on each book to get for your children
Clip arts Original c1iparts of snails
Print out Phonic Chart -ai- (NEW, Oct. 17 . 99)

Bottle Habitat by Jess Lang


Students will construct an aguatic ecosystem in a two-liter pop
bottle. The stock organisms will be: water plants. snails. and
fish. Snldents will record data concerning the observations they
Teachers make over a four-week period. Intennediate level.

A Habitat Made by MEr by Kelly Baeth


The students will create a journal consisting of observation notes
concerning their aquatic creatures and plants. Appropriate for
3rd and 4th grades.
Make a snail with wool
Art & Craft How to draw a snail step-by step
Kid'sAIt Gallery - submit yours too
Snail Alphabet to color.
Coloring - Snails in a garden I
Coloring - Snails in a garden 2
Name the parts of the snail
u Phonics. Read the wordlist with -ai- words. Color
Phonics. TItink of words with the -ai- sound. Write it down
VVorksheets Dot-dot snail ~
~ Added on Sept. 13, 2000

INTERNET BASED WORKSHEETS


Snails - Grades 3 - 6
All About Snails - Grades 2 - 5

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MORE SNAIL FACTS & ACTIVITIES


Snai1 Farming (Heliciculture)

Snails with CUrry and Alexander Rodenbach


Some snail facts
Pest Management - SNAILS AND SLUGS
I Adopt an Escargot
'j This site is in French and is for students and teachers
I~C="'';;;;'''''=''.~=. ,..=.....=.......~.,...::.,....~..-~.. ~··--~~E~y~e~to~E~ye~W~it~h~-~~ar~-d~-e~-~~··-~~··~~·~~i1S~··~··-~--·-~··'~·-··;:··-···~······=.=..;....;..;;..=~I

11....._.._. __..__........_ ..._..__..__ Molluscan pictur~.s__._. _


l[ Malaysian Snail (Picture)
IL .....
Take a look at the insides of a snail
L- Anatomy of a snail
Marine Snail
Brief lact<; and nn illustration of snail anatomy

If ___.._ Pictures of Hawaiian Tree snails


Facts & Tips about using aquatic snails in an aquarium
Cone Shells - Conotoxins
Snails
,1- How to keep snails in un aquarium

Don't forget to check out our other topics. Click on the house above

2nd Counter added in on 1st May 1999 but starting from the number from myoid
homepage put inon 04/22/99

Graphics on this page are original designs by me using Paintshop Pro. Please do not copy
any of my graphics for any purpose unless otherwise stated you are allowed to do so.
They are copyright.

Webmasters Click Here!

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