Agriculture Entomology Important Point (6)

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Agriculture Entomology Important Point

Agriculture Entomology Important Point

Agriculture Entomology Important Point

 Reproductive System  In insects male and female sexes are mostly separate.

1.Sexual dimorphism:
  • It is common where the male differ from the female morphologically.
  • Example- Bee, Mosquito and Cockroach. 
2.Gynandromorph:-
  • (Sexual mosaic) Abnormal individual with secondary sexual characters of both male and female.
  • Example- Mutant Drosophila.
3.Hermaphrodite:-
  • Male and female gonads are in one organism.
  • Example- Cottony cushion scale.

 Types Of Reproduction:-  Three types of reproduction is generally observed in Insect.

1.Oviparity:-

  • Majority of female insects are oviparous that is, they lay Eggs.
  • Example- Head louse moths.
2.Viviparity:-
  • Unlike oviparous, here initiation of egg development take place within the mother.
  • Four main types of viviparity are observed in different insect groups.
i.Ovoviviparity:-
  • Thysanoptera, some cockroaches, few beetles, and some flies-(fleshfly).
  • Fecundity of this group is low.

ii.Peseudoplacental Viviparity:-

  • This occurs when a yolk-deficient egg develops in the genital tract of the female.
  • Example- Aphids, some earwigs, psocids and polytenid bugs.

 iii.Haemocoelous Viviparity:-

  • This involves embryos developing free in the female’s haemolymph with nutrients taken up by osmosis.
  • This form of internal parasitism occurs only in sterpsiptera and some gall midges.

iv.Adenotrophic Viviparity:-

  • This occurs when a poorly developed larva hatches
  • Example- Flies, louse or wallaby flies, bat flies.

3.Parthenogenesis:-  Reproduction without fertilization is called parthenogenesis.

 Different types of parthenogenesis are as follows 

parthenogenesis Types  Example
Based On Occurrence
Facultative (not compulsory) Bee.
Obligatory or constant (compulsory) Stick insect
Cyclic or spordic Aphid.
Based On Sex Produced
Arrhenotoky (Produce male) Bee.
Thelytoky (produce female) Aphid.
Amphitoky or deuterotoky (produce both male and female) Cynipid wasp.
Based On Meiosis
Apodictic No meiosis occurs
Automictic Meiosis occurs, but diploidy is maintained
 
 
 Organisms are classified according to a system of seven ranks 
 
S.N. Ranks (In descending arrangement)
1. Kingdom 
2. Phylum 
3. Class 
4.  Order
5.  Family 
6.  Genus
7. 
Species
 
Classification Of Class Insecta Upto Orders 
  • Insect is a Six legged arthropod.
  • Taxonomist A.D. Imms proposed a classification of insect.

Phylum:- Arthropoda (with several classes)

Class:- Insecta (Hexapoda)
 
Characters of class Insecta 
  • Body is divided into three regions. Head, Thorax & Abdomen
  • In head a pair of antenna and a pair of compound eyes are usually present.
  • Thorax is the centre of locomotion with, 3 pairs of five jointed legs and Two pairs of wings.
  • Excretion is mainly through malpighian tubules.
  • Tracheal system of respiration well developed.
  • Brain is divided into protocerebrum, deutocerebrum and tritocerebrum.
 The class Insecta has two subclasses viz., Apterygota and Pterygota. 
 
Apterygota Pterygota
Primarily wingless evolved from wingless ancestors
Winged or secondarily wingless- evolved from winged ancestors. e.g. Flea, head louse, bed bug.
Metamorphosis is totally absent or slight. Present
Mandibular articulation in head is monocondylic i.e., single Dicondylic i.e., double.
Pleural sulcus in thorax is absent. Present
Pregenital abdominal appendages present. Absent.
 
 
The subclass Apterygota has 4 orders namely
 
Orders Word meanings Example
Thysanura Thysan- fringed, Ura-tail Silverfish
Collembola Coll- glue; Embol- peg Springtail or snowflea
Protura Pro- first, Ura- tail Proturans or Telsontail
Diplura Di- two; Ura- tail Diplurans or Japygids
 
 
The sub-class Pterygota has two division-
  1. Exopterygota 
  2. Endopterygota
 
 Based on the wing development. 
 
Character Exopterygota Endopterygota
Wing development External Internal
Type of metamorphosis Incomplete(Hemimetabola) or gradual (Pau- rametabola) Complete (Holome- tabola)
Pupal stage Absent Present
Immature stage Naiad or Nymph Larva
No. of orders 16  9
 
 
 The Class Insecta has 29 orders (4 in Apterygota and 25 in Pterygota) 
 
Exopterygota Groups
Paleopteran orders
Ephemeroptera Mayflies
Odonata Dragonfly, Damselfly
Orthopteroid orders
Plecoptera Stonefly Group
Grlloblatodia Rock crawlers
Orthoptera
Grasshopper, locust, cricket, mole cricket
Phasmida Stick insect, leaf insect
Dermaptera Earwigs 
Embioptera Webspinners /Embids
Dictyoptera
Cockroach, preying mantis
Isoptera Termites
Zoraptera Zorapterans 
Hemipteroid orders
Psocoptera Book lice Group 
Mallophaga Bird lice 
Siphonculata
Head and body louse
Hemiptera Bugs
Thysanoptera Thrips
Endopterygota
Panorpoid complex
Neuroptera Antilions, aphidlion, owl flies, mantispid flies.
Mecoptera Scorpionflies. Group
Lepidoptera Butterflies and moths.
Trichoptera  Caddisfly
Diptera  True fly. 
Siphonaptera Fleas.
Others
Hymenoptera  Bees, wasps, ants.
Coleoptera Beetles and weevils.
Strepsiptera Stylopids

 Agriculture Entomology Important Point

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