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Announcements reproduction

• Lab quiz next Monday • Types of offspring produced • Will cover same last two labs and two • Parthenogenesis field trips. • Paedogenesis • Know • Hermaphroditism in – insect internal anatomy • Effects of vertically transmitted – features of groups covered bacteria on reproduction – Information about aquatic insects covered in lecture and lab

Example aphid life cycle Paedogenesis

• Larval • Production of young by larvae • Loss of adult stage – Gall midges- eggs develop inside mother and consume her before emerging • Loss of pupal stage • Embryo formed in hemocoel of paedogenic mother- • Adults emerge only when conditions are adverse to larvae

Effects of vertically transmitted Hermaphroditism bacteria on reproduction-Wolbachia • Infects insect ovaries of • Rare, but occurs in Cottony cushion scale many orders • Females posess ovotestes • Passed onto next • Self fertilization generation through egg • Causes – Reproductive incompatibility between populations – Sex ratio distortion • Meiosis disturbed and females formed • Feminizes males into females

1 Insect growth Insect development

• Kinds of growth = stadium – Indeterminate – Determinate Imago = adult • Growth through molting – Membranes expand within instar – Growth when exoskeleton is soft just after molting

Insect development Overall life history patterns

• Ametabolous • Molt increment- increase in size between – primitive wingless groups • Factors influencing molt increments, intermolt – indefinite number of molts period, and number of instars • Hemimetabolous – Food supply – gradual change towards adult form – wings develop externally. – Temperature • Holometabolous – Sex – Non-feeding pupal stage present – Interaction between genes and environment – Develop wings and other adult structures internally during immature stages

Overall life history patterns

2 Indeterminate growth Determinate growth

• Continue to molt until death • Most insects • Collembola, Diplura • Distinctive instar marks end of growth • Apterygote

Hemimetabolous Hemimetabolous • Stages • Egg, , adult (no pupa) • In aquatic insects, immature called naiad • Nymph resembles adult but without wings • Exopterygote- wings develop on dorsal surface of thorax • Terrestrial • Adults and immatures often use similar habitats and food • Crickets, true bugs, cockroaches • Aquatic- dragonflies, , stoneflies

Hemimetabolous nymphs Holometabolous

• Stages – Egg, , pupa, adult – Larval stages looks very different than adult – Larvae often use different habitats and eat different food than adults • Adult structures found in larvae as 'imaginal disks' • Endopterygote- wings develop in invaginated pockets of integument • Bees, wasps, , , flies, caddisflies

3 Larval types Holometabolous

Thoracic legs Thoracic legs No legs Abdominal prolegs forwards head Flies, wasps, beetles /sawflies Many orders, Predators, soil, dung, predatory beetles carrion

Pupal types Pupae

• Resting stage • Rearrangement of body into adult form • Sometimes enclosed in cocoon • At end, pupa encloses adult

Most pupae Sclerotized cuticle Appendages loosely pressed to Appendages body cemented to body

Ecdysis

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