Title: Lab 6
1Lab 6 Orthopteroids
2Orthopteroid Characteristics
1) Paurometabolous, simple metamorphosis
2) mandibulate mouthparts
3) large anal lobe in hind wing
4) cerci
Anal lobe
5) Numerous Malpighian tubules
3Orthopteroid Orders
1) Orthoptera (Crickets and Grasshoppers)
2) Phasmatodea (Walking Sticks)
3) Grylloblattodea (Rock Crawlers)
4) Mantophasmatodea (Gladiators)
5) Dermaptera (Earwigs)
6) Plecoptera (Stoneflies)
7) Embiidina (Web Spinners)
8) Zoraptera (Angel Insects)
9) Isoptera (Termites)
10) Mantodea (Praying Mantises)
11) Blattodea (Cockroaches)
4Phylogeny of Orthopteroid Orders
These orders are divided on the basis of
unambiguous molecular characteristics (Wheeler et
al. (2001).
5Order Orthoptera (Crickets and Grasshoppers)
Ortho straight, ptera wing
- Winged or wingless, 4 wings
- Thick elongate, veiny front wings (tegmina),
broad membranous hind wings
- Primarily plant feeders, agriculture pests
- Many produce sound through stridulation
6Family Acrididae (Short-Horned Grasshoppers)
- Antennae less than half of body length
- Tympanum on the first abdominal segment
7Family Tettigoniidae (Long-Horned Grasshoppers)
- Antennae long as or longer than body length
8Family Gryllidae (Crickets)
9Family Rhaphidophoridae (Cave or Camel Crickets)
- Brownish and humpbacked in appearance
- Live in caves and under stones, logs and other
dark and moist places.
10Order Phasmatodea (Walkingsticks)
- Wings much reduced or entirely absent
- Cerci short and one segmented
- Ovipositor short and concealed
- Some species parthenogenetic
11Order Grylloblattodea (Rock Crawlers)
- Slender elongate and wingless
- Eyes are small or absent, no ocelli
- Antennae long and filiform
- Nocturnal, occurring at high elevation along the
edge of glaciers or ice caves
- Feed on dead insects found on snow fields
12Order Mantophasmatodea (Gladiator insects)
- Recently described in 2001 (Zompro 2001)
- Antennae long and filiform
- Resemble immature mantids
- Short lived (few weeks), predators
13Order Dermaptera (Earwigs)
- Elongate body, somewhat flattened
- Front wings short leathery veinles (tegmina or
elytra)
- Cerci differ in males and females
- Feed on dead or decaying vegetable matter. Some
feed on living plants and few are predators
14Order Plecoptera (Stoneflies)
- Aquatic nymphs, winged adults
- Somewhat flattened, soft body
- Wings held flat over abdomen
- Nymphs can be herbivores, predators or
omnivores, many adults do not feed
- Nymphs have branched gills on thorax
15Order Embiidina (Webspinners)
- Somewhat flattened, soft body
- Short and stout legs, noticeable cerci
- Front tarsus enlarged containing silk glands
- Females wingless, males winged
- Somewhat flattened, soft body
- Feed on dead plant material underground in web
made galleries
16Order Zoraptera (Angel Insects)
- Similar in appearance to termites
- Winged or wingless, reduced venation
- Short and unsegmented cerci that terminate in a
long bristle
- Feed on fungal spores and dead insects under old
wood
17Order Isoptera (Termites)
- Organized, integrated societies, social
- Closely related to roaches and mantids
- workers and soldiers are both sexes, sterile
casts develop from unfertilized eggs
- Detritivores, cellulose digesting, wood
18Order Isoptera (Termites)
19Order Mantodea (Mantids)
- Front legs modified into raptorial appendages
for grasping and crushing prey
20Order Blattodea (Cockroaches)
- Flattened oval-shaped body
- Head concealed from above by pronotum
- Detritivore pests, many are invasive pests from
tropical regions
21FAMILIES TO KNOW
Acrididae (Short-Horned Grasshoppers)
Gryllidae (Crickets)
Tettigoniidae (Long-Horned Grasshoppers)
Rhaphidophoridae (Cave or Camel Crickets)
221) Draw the head of a grasshopper and label all
the mouthparts.
2) Draw a male and female cricket.
3) Draw the abdomen and cerci of a Phamatodea,
Dermaptera, Embiidina and Blattodea.
4) Draw the nymph and adult of a Plecoptera.
5) Illustrate the difference between Zoraptera
and Isoptera.
6) Draw the raptorial appendages of Mantodea.