CoCkroaCh
a typical insect, such as the common
cockroach, above, has a body in three
main parts. at the front is the head, which
encloses the brain and bears the antennae,
mouthparts, and eyes. In the middle is the
thorax, where the six legs join. at the rear is
the abdomen, which contains the digestive,
reproductive, and sex organs. The hard,
outer skeleton is made mainly
of a substance called chitin.
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Insects 279-
Segment of
abdomen
Middle leg
Eye
Exoskeleton
Midgut (cuticle)
Ommatidium
Corneal
lens
Leg joint
Heart
Mouthparts
Main nerves
Spiracle
Compound eye
an insect’s eye is made up
of many rod-shaped units called
ommatidia. The eye of a housefly
has about 4,000 ommatidia. each
single ommatidium detects the
amount and color of light
entering the eye, but it cannot
form an image by itself.
Together, all the thousands of
ommatidia in the eye produce
a mosaic-like view of the outside
world made up of light and
dark patches.
Wing
Claw
Crop
Hindgut
Trachea
Sex organs
Rectum
FeedIng
Insects feed on almost anything—wood, blood,
nectar, paper, shoe polish, seaweed, and other
insects. The mouthparts of most insects,
however, are specialized for a particular kind of
food. Some mouthparts are adapted to bite,
others to pierce, suck, sponge, scrape, and probe.
The mouthparts have four main structures. The
mandibles are hard jaws that bite and chew;
the maxillae are secondary jaws; the labrum
and labium are the upper and lower lips.
earTh IS CraWLIng with insects; in fact, they make up the
largest group of animals. There are at least one million
different species, including beetles, butterflies, ants, and bees.
Insects first appeared on earth more than 500 million years
ago and are found in almost every kind of habitat, from cold
mountains to tropical rain forests. although all insects have
six legs and a body covered by a hard exoskeleton (outer
skeleton), they vary enormously in size and shape.
The goliath beetle weighs more than 3.5 oz (100 g);
the tiny fairyfly is almost invisible to the human eye.
Some insects cause problems for humans. Flies spread
diseases, and weevils and locusts eat farm crops.
parasites such as ticks and lice live and feed on
farm animals and sometimes on humans, too. But
insects are a vital part of nature. They pollinate
flowers and other crops and are an important
source of food for many birds, bats, and reptiles.
Certain insects are also very useful to humans—
without bees, for example, there would be no honey. Antenna
(feeler)
Butterfly’s tubular
mouthparts work like
a drinking straw.
Bugs such as aphids
have needlelike,
piercing mouthparts.
Optic nerve
Lens to brain
Facet
Casing is thin and
flexible at leg joint.
Seta (touch-
sensitive hair)
Front leg
Eye
Antenna
Brain
InSIde an InSeCT
The tough exoskeleton,
or cuticle, surrounds and
protects the soft internal
organs. an insect breathes
through tiny air tubes called tracheae,
which form a network inside its body. The
tubes open at holes called spiracles in the
cuticle. Water-dwelling insects such as the grubs
of pond beetles breathe through gills, which are
formed from delicate folds of cuticle.
Malpighian
tubules (kidneys)
help control
water balance.
Thorax
Back leg
Housefly sucks up liquid
food through its padded,
spongelike mouthparts.
Anus
Tubelike
casing of leg
Leg joint
Head
US_279_Insects_1.indd 279 21/01/16 5:01 pm