Range
Although a few species of insects occur in fresh water, in the intertidal zone of the seashore, or on the ocean surface, the vast majority are terrestrial. Insects are especially abundant in the tropics but may be found in all except the most extreme latitudes and altitudes. For example, about 300 species (mostly FLIES) live north of the 75th parallel on the Queen Elizabeth Islands. A few species even occur in Antarctica, as parasites of BIRDS or SEALS.
Success of Insects
The diversity of insects is staggering: the one million recorded species are estimated to represent only 10-50% of the world total. In Canada, nearly 30 000 species have been described out of a total of about 55 000 species estimated.
Insects owe their success to their adaptability and to their long and varied evolution. Critical to the evolution of the group was a light, wax-covered (hence waterproof) cuticular external skeleton (exoskeleton), which allowed them to take up life on land. They were among the first terrestrial animals and thus faced little competition for the numerous and varied niches that were available. Their small size enables insects to hide easily from predators and to feed on scarce materials. Smallness, together with flight, facilitates dispersal by wind into new habitats, leading to geographic isolation of populations and ultimately to the evolution of new species. Reproductive capacity and life history have also been important. The production of large numbers of eggs, combined with short generation time, has enabled insects to adapt rapidly to changing environments.
Description
As ARTHROPODA, insects possess an exoskeleton. Their segmented body is basically divisible into 3 regions: head, thorax and abdomen. The head is the feeding, sensory and nervous centre; it bears mouthparts, antennae, eyes and, internally, brain and other clusters of nerve cells (ganglia). The 3-segmented thorax is the locomotor centre with, in most insects, 3 pairs of legs and paired wings on the second and third segments and, internally, segmental ganglia. The abdomen, which shows the segmental pattern most clearly, is where metabolism and reproduction occur.
Primitive mouthparts are of the chewing type, as in GRASSHOPPERS and BEETLES, but frequently they are modified for feeding on liquid food as in the housefly (sponging), MOTHS and BUTTERFLIES (siphoning), and MOSQUITOES and APHIDS (piercing and sucking) or for nonfeeding purposes such as defence (mandibles of soldier TERMITES). Legs may also take on other functions, including jumping (hindlegs of fleas and grasshoppers), swimming (hindlegs of water beetles), prey capture (forelegs of MANTIS), attachment to host (forelegs of lice) or to mate (forelegs of diving beetles), digging (forelegs of mole CRICKETS), sound production (hindlegs of many grasshoppers), and food collection and storage (legs of worker honeybees). The wings may be modified for protection (forewings of beetles, or elytra), camouflage (many moths), gyroscopic control (hindwings of flies, or halteres) and sound production (forewings of crickets).
Colour
Sense Organs
Co-ordination and Behaviour
Integration of activities both within and among insects is achieved by nervous and chemical means. Reflex nervous pathways arising in segmental ganglia initiate movements of individual legs and wings. However, the coordinated activities of these appendages that result in walking, running, and flight are controlled by the brain.
Some nerve cells within the brain and elsewhere are modified to produce hormones. The effects of these hormones, together with secretions from other endocrine centres, are comparable to those of vertebrate hormones and serve to co-ordinate processes including reproductive development and behaviour, metabolism, urine formation and caste determination in social insects.
Insects also produce various external secretions (pheromones) used to attract mates, regulate sexual maturation, control caste formation, signal danger and mark trails for other members of the same species. Other noxious-smelling or irritant secretions warn off potential enemies.
Reproduction and Development
Insects use internal fertilization. In most species, sperm are transferred to the female in a "bag" (spermatophore) formed from secretions in the male reproductive system. As the spermatophore forms, it pushes into the female reproductive system, carrying the sperm along inside itself. Less commonly, sperm are transferred directly (not enclosed in a spermatophore) using a copulatory organ.
Development
Among pterygotes (winged insects, although some may be secondarily wingless) 2 groups occur, each with a distinct form of development. Insects with externally developed wings (eg, grasshoppers, BUGS, DRAGONFLIES and COCKROACHES) undergo partial metamorphosis where the young increasingly resemble the adult, notably in development of external wing buds. At the final molt, fully formed wings are exposed.
Complete metamorphosis occurs in insects with internally developed wings such as butterflies and MOTHS (Lepidoptera), BEETLES (Coleoptera), flies (Diptera), and WASPS, BEES and ANTS (Hymenoptera). A striking change in appearance occurs from the juvenile to adult stage, the 2 being separated by a third stage, the pupa.
The evolution of a pupal stage between larva and adult has permitted specialization of the life history such that the primary function of the larva is accumulation of food reserves; those of the adult are reproduction and dispersal. For many insects, the pupa has developed into a highly weather-resistant stage which, together with the restriction of feeding activity to the larva, has enabled these insects to colonize habitats where conditions are suitable for development only at limited times of the year.
Dormancy
Biological Importance
About 75% of all insect species are plant-feeders and play important roles in ECOSYSTEMS, in particular between producers (plants) and second-order consumers (those animals that prey on insects). Others are carnivorous, omnivorous, or parasitic on other animals (including insects). Less than 1% (perhaps 10 000 species worldwide) constitute INSECT PESTS, which cause disease or death in humans and livestock (eg, mosquitoes) or massive damage to agricultural and forest products (eg, pine beetle), and manufactured goods. However, the value of BENEFICIAL INSECTS, through pollination (especially, bees), biological control (eg, wasps), and production of honey, beeswax and silk, outweighs several fold the harm caused by pest species.
Author CEDRIC GILLOTT
Suggested Reading
H.V. Danks, Insects of Canada, Biological Survey of Canada (Terrestrial Arthropods) (1988); Cedric Gillott, Entomology (1980, 3rd edition 2005).
Links to Other Sites
Canadian Biodiversity Website
A great information source for all budding biologists. Learn about biodiversity theory, natural history, and conservation issues. From McGill’s Redpath Museum.
Entomological Society of Canada
Find out what entomology is all about and browse an extensive collection of colourful insect photographs at this Entomological Society of Canada website.
Butterflies North and South
Learn about the natural history of Canadian butterfly species and planting butterfly gardens at this extensive Virtual Museum of Canada website.
E-Fauna BC
An extensively illustrated guide to wildlife species found in British Columbia. Covers bats, birds, beetles, bugs and much more. Also features an insect glossary and notes about invasive species. A biogeographic initiative of the Lab for Advanced Spatial Analysis, Department of Geography, UBC.
Entomology
Learn all about angry arachnids and irascible insects in this online introduction to entomology. Features a glossary, great photos, graphs, charts and more. From Natural Resources Canada.
The Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids and Nematodes
This website provides information about the scope and contents of the Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids and Nematodes. Check the “Index” link for illustrated descriptions of various taxonomic groups.
Glossary: Zoology
A detialed glossary of zoological terms. From the French National Institute for Agricultural Research.
Stick bug is world's longest insect
A CBC News story about the world's longest insect.
Life history and production of mayflies, stoneflies, and caddisflies
A scientific article about the life history and production of the Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (EPT) community in Prince Edward Island. From the Canadian Journal of Zoology.
University of Alberta's E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum
Check out images and information about insect specimens found in the University of Alberta's E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum, one of the most significant insect collections in Canada.
Benthic invertebrates
An online guide to benthic invertebrates found in or on the bottom sediments of rivers, streams, and lakes in Ontario and other regions of Canada. From ecospark.ca
Aquatic Invertebrates of Alberta Online Textbook
An online guide to all major groups of Alberta's aquatic invertebrates. Offers illustrated details of the natural history of each group as well as tips on collecting and preserving specimens. A University of Alberta website.

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