General Insects
 Fig. 136.
Ants
The farmer who has fought "bugs" on crop after crop needs no argument to convince him
that insects are serious enemies to agriculture. Yet even he may be surprised to learn that the damage done
by them, as estimated by good authority, amounts to millions and millions of dollars yearly in the United
States and Canada.
Every one thinks he knows what an insect is. If, however, we are
willing in this matter to make our notion agree with that of the people who have studied insects most and
know them best, we must include among the true insects only such air-breathing animals as have six legs, no
more, and have the body divided into three parts—head, thorax, and abdomen. These parts are clearly shown in
Fig. 136, which represents the ant, a true insect. All insects do not show the divisions of the body
so clearly as this figure shows them, but on careful examination you can usually make
them out. The head bears one pair of feelers, and these in many insects serve also as organs of smell and
sometimes of hearing. Less prominent feelers are to be found in the region of the mouth. These serve as
organs of taste.

Fig. 137. Parts of an Insect

Fig. 138. Compound Eye
Of Dragon Fly
The eyes of insects are especially noticeable. Close examination shows them to be made
up of a thousand or more simple eyes. Such an eye is called a compound eye. An enlarged view of one of
these is shown in Fig. 138.
Attached to the thorax are the legs and also the wings, if the insect has wings. The
rear portion is the abdomen, and this, like the other parts, is composed of parts known as segments. The
insect breathes through openings in the abdomen and thorax called spiracles (see Fig. 137).
An examination of spiders, mites, and ticks shows eight legs; therefore these do not
belong to the true insects, nor do the thousand-legged worms and their relatives.

Fig. 139. The House Fly
a, egg;
b, larva, or maggot;
c, pupa;
(All enlarged)

Fig. 139a. The House Fly
adult male. (Enlarged)
The chief classes of insects are as follows: the flies, with two wings only; the bees,
wasps, and ants, with four delicate wings; the beetles, with four wings—two hard, horny ones covering the two
more delicate ones. When the beetle is at rest its two hard wings meet in a straight line down the back. This
peculiarity distinguishes it from the true bug, which has four wings. The two outer wings are partly horny,
and in folding lap over each other. Butterflies and moths are much alike in appearance but differ in habit.
The butterfly works by day and the moth by night. Note the knob on the end of the butterfly's feeler (Fig.
143). The moth has no such knob.

Fig. 140. A Typical Bug
a, adult;
b, side view of sucking
mouth-part Both a and b
are much enlarged
It is important to know how insects take their food, for by knowing this we are often
able to destroy insect pests. Some are provided with mouth parts for chewing their food; others have a long
tube with which they pierce plants or animals and, like the mosquito, suck their food from the inside. Insects of this latter class cannot of course be harmed by poison on the
surface of the leaves on which they feed.

Fig. 141. Beetle
a, larva;
b, pupa;
c, adult;
d, burrow
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