the insect factor in urban plant protection bob gara

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The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

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Page 1: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The Insect Factor inUrban Plant Protection

Bob Gara

Page 2: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Every where you look

There are fungiall around us, some 100,000 species in fact.

Bob will soon tell you that there are a lot of fungi in the world.

Page 3: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Ther

e ar

e a

Ther

e ar

e a

MIL

LIO

N

MIL

LIO

Nsp

ecie

s of

inse

cts!

spec

ies

of in

sect

s!

Yea, and 500,000 ofthose species arebeetles.

But

Page 4: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Several times I’ve visited southern Chile, and collected insects:

• find undescribed species• new genus• even new families

There may be well over 5 - 10 million insect species

Page 5: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

By sheer numbers alone, insectsbecome important to us: especiallyin urban horticulture

1. Destroy seeds beforethey are collected

2. Destroy seeds when stored &when planted in nurseries

3. Urban plants are defoliated and become ugly

4. Mature trees and plants arekilled by barkbeetles, aphids etc.

5. Wooden products are destroyedby termites, carpenter ants andpowderpost beetles

Page 6: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

BOB GARA

Page 7: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara
Page 8: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara
Page 9: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Speakingof levers

Give me a lever longenough and I can liftthe world.

Page 10: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

1. Jointed appendages, 2. 1. Jointed appendages, 2. Bilateral-symmetry, 3. Body Bilateral-symmetry, 3. Body composed of rings, composed of rings, 4. Exoskeleton, & 5. Dorsal 4. Exoskeleton, & 5. Dorsal heart and ventral nervous heart and ventral nervous systemsystem

Don’t forget:

Page 11: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

There are about 20 classes of arthropods & the best way to getan overview is to look at theirevolutionary history (phylogeny).

R.E. Snodgrass

Page 12: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

R.E. Snodgrass

Page 13: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Snodgrass developed a theory onthe evolution of the arthropods bystudying the movement of ancestralappendages in embryos of theArthropoda

Page 14: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Annelid

Onychophora

Trilobite

Chilopod

Insecta

This is what Snodgrass suggested

Page 15: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

If this sequential development ofappendages is correct (as seen inthe embryos), are there really membersof these stages? Is all this real?

Are there onychopherans?

Even fossils

Page 16: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Are there trilobites?

Page 17: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

In any case, position of the mouthpartsvis-à-vis the various arthropods has created this divide: Chelicerata & Mandibulata

No antennae

Page 18: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Let’s look at some Chelicerata

Chelicera

Pedipalp

1. Horseshoecrab

Page 19: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

2. Scorpion

Chelicerae

Pedipalps

Page 20: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The Economically ImportantChilicerates -- ARACHNIDA

SpidersMitesTicks

Page 21: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Chelicera

Pedipalp

Fang

3. Spider (Class Arachnida)

Page 22: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Larval Nymphal Adult

4. Ticks (Class Arachnida)

The hard ticks: ixodidae

Lyme diseasebacteria

Page 23: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Fused Chelicerae

Pedipalp

Chelicerae and pedipalpsof a hard tick (Ixodidae)

Page 24: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Chelicerae

Pedipalp

Gall mite

Spider mite

5. Couple of mites (Class Arachnida)

Blister mite

Spider mites

Page 25: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Chelicerae

Chelicerae

Ch

elic

era

e

Pedipalp

More ticks & mites: Arachnida

Page 26: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Let’s Talk About the Subphylum:Mandibulata

Page 27: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Let’s go back some 400 millionyears ago: Silurian Period

Era Millions yrs ago Periods Life forms

Paleozoic 440

SilurianSilurian Scorpions, millipedes,

rise of fish

500 Ordovician 1st vertebrates

600 Cambrian 1st arthropods trilobites and some others

Precambrian Primitive invertebrates floating around

1st land animals!

Page 28: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

A big breakthrough during Siluriantimes was that appendages of thearthropod began to be closely associated with the mouth -- eveninside the mouth as in MANDIBULATA

Embryo-genesis ofan insect: segmentsI-4 will go around thehead and into the mouth: hence,MANDIBULATA.

Old Snodgrasswas right on.

Page 29: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Insecta

Crustacea

Centipedes Millipedes

Mandibulata

Protoarthropod

So, during the Silurian the newland animals quickly diversifiedand evolved

Let’s mention the• Crustaceans• Centipedes• Millipedes

Page 30: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Centipede

Millipede

Poison claw

Classes: Chilopoda & Diplopoda

Page 31: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Crustacea

Hi!

• Have 2-antennae• Complex mouthparts inside the mouth• Cephalothorax

Page 32: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The Class: InsectaInsecta• 3-body regions• 1-pair of antennae• 3-pairs of legs• Adults are winged

Page 33: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Of course, insects are arthropods: have exoskeletons. What are some advantages of having the skeletonon the outside?

• Physical protection

• Great mechanical advantage

• Prevents desiccation

• Led to the fact insects havecomplete metamorphosis!

Page 34: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Arachnida

Spiders Mites Ticks

Chelicerata Mandibulata

The Chelicerata have theirmouthparts outside the mouth

Review

The Economically ImportantChelicerata – Class, Arachnida

Page 35: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

A rhododendron mite

Che

licer

ae

Page 36: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Identify the chelicerae

Page 37: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

1. The phylum Arthropoda is divided into the subphyla Chelicerata and Mandibulata. Name two organisms from each group: ________________ and __________________________. Label the mouthparts of this typical mite.

Page 38: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Since all arthropods, including the insects, have a hardexoskeleton they have to changeit in order to grow. This processis called MOLTING.

Cicadamolting

Page 39: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The fact that insects molt has ledthem to conquer just about everyniche on earth. Because:

when insects molt, they undergoa change in form.

Hmmmm, the word for “change-in-form” is METAMORPHOSIS.

Page 40: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

No Metamorphosis

Incomplete Metamorphosis

This is a silver fish

Page 41: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

This is a silverfish

Page 42: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Gradual Metamorphosis

Page 43: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Now for the greatest inventionin the world !!

Complete Metamorphosis

Page 44: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Complete Metamorphosis

Eggs

Lava (maggot)

Adult

The Pupa !

Page 45: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Complete Metamorphosis

Page 46: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Antenna

Compound eye

Ocellus

Mouth (mandible)

The Head

Hi, I’m Walt

Page 47: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Labium

Labial palp

Maxillary palp

Labrum

The Mouthparts

Labium

Can’t see themandibles

Page 48: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Labrum

Mandibles

Mx &Mx palps

Labium & Lb palps

Page 49: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

I really want you to seehow the mouthparts fit

Page 50: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Again, the mouthparts

Page 51: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The Hemiptera: includes the bugs

Page 52: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Hemipteraincludes theaphids, scales,cicadas etc.

Page 53: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Aphids: Aphididae

Have piercing-sucking mouth parts

Page 54: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The Hemiptera havePiercing-sucking mouthparts

Page 55: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Piercing-sucking mouth parts

Mx

MxMnd

Cross section

Page 56: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

The stylets (piercing-sucking)mouthparts of Hemiptera

Page 57: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

More on aphids

Page 58: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

MidgutForegut Hindgut

Digestive system of an insect

Page 59: The Insect Factor in Urban Plant Protection Bob Gara

Filter chamberof aphids & otherhomopterans