Orchard, Garden and Field Insects
What Is An Insect? Below is an answer circa 2010 from an Encyclopedia.
An insect is an invertebrate animal of the class
Insecta of the phylum Arthropoda. Like other arthropods, an insect has a hard outer covering, or exoskeleton, a
segmented body, and jointed legs. Adult insects typically have wings and are the only flying invertebrates.
The body of the typical adult insect is divided into three distinct parts, the head, thorax, and abdomen. The
head bears three pairs of mouthparts, one pair of compound eyes, three simple eyes (ocelli), and one pair of
jointed sensory antennae. The thorax is divided into three segments, each with a pair of jointed legs, and bears
two pairs of wings. The abdomen has posterior appendages associated with reproduction. The exoskeleton is composed
of a horny substance called chitin.
Insects breathe through a complex network of air tubes (tracheae) that open to the outside through a series of
small valved apertures (spiracles) along the sides of the body. In chewing insects the digestive system includes a
muscular gizzard that is lacking in sucking insects. The simple circulatory system is composed of a tubular heart
that pumps blood forward into the head, from which it diffuses through the tissues and back into the heart. The
aquatic larvae of many insects breathe by means of external gills; some very primitive species breathe directly
through the body wall.
That was a complicated answer but is easier undstood after you review the 1903 to 1914 text book version in
the following pages. General Insects, Orchard Insects, Garden and Field Insects and The Cotton Boll Weevil.
General Insects
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