enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Entognatha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entognatha

    These minute arthropods are apterous, unlike some orders of insects that have lost their wings secondarily (but are derived from winged ancestors). Their mouthparts are enclosed within a pouch in the head capsule, called the gnathal pouch, so only the tips of the mandibles and maxillae are exposed beyond the cavity. [1]

  3. Arthropod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropod

    For example, they are often used as sensors to detect air or water currents, or contact with objects; aquatic arthropods use feather-like setae to increase the surface area of swimming appendages and to filter food particles out of water; aquatic insects, which are air-breathers, use thick felt-like coats of setae to trap air, extending the ...

  4. Mandibulata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandibulata

    The mandibulates are divided between the extant groups Myriapoda (millipedes & centipedes, among others) and Pancrustacea (including insects and crustaceans, among others). Molecular phylogenetic studies suggest that the living arthropods are related as shown in the cladogram below.

  5. Insect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect

    Insect cooking oil, insect butter and fatty alcohols can be made from such insects as the superworm (Zophobas morio). [199] Insect species including the black soldier fly or the housefly in their maggot forms, and beetle larvae such as mealworms , can be processed and used as feed for farmed animals including chicken, fish and pigs. [ 200 ]

  6. Hexapoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexapoda

    The subphylum Hexapoda (from Greek for 'six legs') or hexapods comprises the largest clade of arthropods and includes most of the extant arthropod species. It includes the crown group class Insecta (true insects), as well as the much smaller clade Entognatha, which includes three classes of wingless arthropods that were once considered insects: Collembola (springtails), Protura (coneheads) and ...

  7. Arachnid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arachnid

    A consensus emerged from about 2010 onwards, based on both morphological and molecular evidence; extant (living) arthropods are a monophyletic group and are divided into three main clades: chelicerates (including arachnids), pancrustaceans (the paraphyletic crustaceans plus insects and their allies), and myriapods (centipedes, millipedes and ...

  8. Insect morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_morphology

    Here, the vertex, or the apex (dorsal region), is situated between the compound eyes of insects with hypognathous and opisthognathous heads. In prognathous insects, the vertex is not found between the compound eyes, but rather where the ocelli are normally found. This is because the primary axis of the head is rotated 90° to become parallel to ...

  9. Chelicerata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelicerata

    Although well behind the insects, chelicerates are one of the most diverse groups of animals, with over 77,000 living species that have been described in scientific publications. [82] Some estimates suggest that there may be 130,000 undescribed species of spider and nearly 500,000 undescribed species of mites and ticks. [ 83 ]