A simple way to tell insects apart - Anika Hazra

298,695 views ・ 2018-04-03

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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A whip-like straw.
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Powerful, crushing blades.
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A pointed, piercing tube.
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There are nearly a million known insect species in the world,
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but most have one of just five common types of mouthparts.
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And that’s extremely useful to scientists
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because when they encounter an unfamiliar insect in the wild,
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they can learn a lot about it just by examining how it eats.
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Scientific classification, or taxonomy,
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is used to organize all living things into seven levels:
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kingdom,
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phylum,
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class,
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order,
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family,
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genus,
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and species.
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The features of an insect’s mouthparts can help identify which order it belongs to,
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while also providing clues about how it evolved and what it feeds on.
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The chewing mouthpart is the most common.
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It’s also the most primitive—
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all other mouthparts are thought to have started out looking like this one
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before evolving into something different.
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It features a pair of jaws called mandibles
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with toothed inner edges that cut up and crush solid foods,
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like leaves or other insects.
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You can find this mouthpart on ants from the Hymenoptera order,
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grasshoppers and crickets of the Orthoptera order,
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dragonflies of the Odonata order,
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and beetles of the Coleoptera order.
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The piercing-sucking mouthpart consists of a long, tube-like structure called a beak.
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This beak can pierce plant or animal tissue
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to suck up liquids like sap or blood.
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It can also secrete saliva with digestive enzymes
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that liquefy food for easier sucking.
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Insects in the Hemiptera order have piercing-sucking mouthparts
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and include bed bugs,
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cicadas,
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aphids,
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and leafhoppers.
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The siphoning mouthpart,
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a friendlier version of the piercing and sucking beak,
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also consists of a long, tube-like structure called a proboscis
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that works like a straw to suck up nectar from flowers.
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Insects of the Lepidoptera order—
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butterflies and moths—
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keep their proboscises rolled up tightly beneath their heads
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when they’re not feeding
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and unfurl them when they come across some sweet nectar.
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With the sponging mouthpart, there’s yet another tube,
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this time ending in two spongy lobes
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that contain many finer tubes called pseudotracheae.
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The pseudotracheae secrete enzyme-filled saliva
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and soak up fluids and dissolved foods by capillary action.
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House flies,
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fruit flies,
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and the other non-biting members of the Diptera order
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are the only insects that use this technique.
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But, there’s a catch.
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Biting flies within Diptera,
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like mosquitoes,
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horse flies,
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and deer flies,
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have a piercing-sucking mouthpart instead of the sponging mouthpart.
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And finally, the chewing-lapping mouthpart is a combination of mandibles
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and a proboscis with a tongue-like structure at its tip
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for lapping up nectar.
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On this type of mouthpart,
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the mandibles themselves are not actually used for eating.
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For bees and wasps, members of the Hymenoptera order,
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they serve instead as tools for pollen-collecting and wax-molding.
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Of course, in nature, there are always exceptions to the rules.
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The juvenile stages of some insects, for example,
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have completely different kinds of mouths than their adult versions,
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like caterpillars, which use chewing mouthparts to devour leaves
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before metamorphosing into butterflies and moths
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with siphoning mouthparts.
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Still, mouthpart identification can, for the most part,
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help scientists—and you —categorize insects.
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So why not break out a magnifying lens
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and learn a little more about who’s nibbling your vegetable garden,
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biting your arm,
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or just flying by your ear.
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