Entomology For Master Gardeners
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Transcript Entomology For Master Gardeners
Entomology For
Master
Gardeners
Mike Wagner
Regents Professor-Emeritus
Northern Arizona University
School of Forestry
Outline of Topics
Extent
and Economic Importance
Insect Growth and Development
Insect Feeding / Mouthparts
Classification and Taxonomy
Movement and Spread
Population Dynamics / Concept of Pest
Diagnosing Insect Problems
Pest Management Approaches
Extent and Economic
Importance
Major
form of higher life
Attack all stages of all species
Damage equals harvest
Beneficial aspects
Beneficial Aspects
Pollination
Predators / Parasites
Human food
Biological control agents
Nutrient recycling
Insect products: honey, wax, shellac, dye
Conservation biology
Art and literature
Ecotourism- butterfly farms / exhibits
Characteristicsof Insects
Arthropods:
exoskeleton, jointed
appendages
Adult Insects:
Head, thorax, abdomen
1pair antennae
3 pair legs
2 pair of wings
Arthropods
(Phylum Arthropoda: also include trilobites, horseshoe crabs, spiders,
crustaceans, millipedes, centipedes)
Insects are all in the HEXAPODA (class)
Body with three distinct regions: head, thorax, and abdomen
1. Head:
Sensory Organ
a) Paired appendages
(antennae)
b) Mouthparts
Head
2. Thorax:
Locomotion
3. Abdomen:
Reproductive and
Digestive
Thorax
Abdomen
• Thoracic legs
• Prolegs
Thoracic legs
Prolegs
Insect Relatives
Spiders,
mites, ticks, centipedes,
millipedes, sowbugs, snails, slugs
Bugs vs. “bugs”
Insect Growth and
Development
Metamorphosis
Shed
exoskeleton (molting)
Stages
Egg
Larva/nymph
Pupa
Adult
Instars
Metamorphosis: Simple
Wing
pads
• Wings
Squash
Metamorphosis: Complete
Metamorphosis
Insect Growth and
Development
Gradual:
Egg-nymph-adult
Nymph similar to adult
Ex. Aphids, scales, grasshoppers
Complete:
Egg-larva-pupa-adult
Larva does damage
Stages occur in different habitats
Ex. Beetles, butterflies, flies
Insect Feeding/Mouthparts
Chewing
Hard mandibles
Holes, tunnels, partial eaten leaves
Sucking
Straw (stylet), probosis
Curling, stunting, mottling, galls
Phytotoxic necrosis
4
Types of
Mouth Parts
Piercing/sucking
Straw
Chewing
Mouth
Parts
Piercing/
sopping
Insect Classification
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Insect Classification
Animal
Kingdom
Arthropods
Phylum
Insecta
Class
Coleoptera
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Scolytidae
Dendroctonus
brevicomis
Insect Classification
Kingdom
Animal
Phylum
keen
Arthropods
Class
pretty
Insecta
Order
clothes
Coleoptera
Family
Genus
Species
Scolytidae
Dendroctonus
brevicomis
out
fill
guys
some
Taxonomic Classification
Common
level: Order and Family
Basis for classification
Mouthparts
Type of wings
Type of metamorphosis
Common Insect Orders
Coleoptera:
beetles, weevils
Dermaptera: earwigs
Diptera: flies, mosquitoes, gnats, midges
Hemiptera: true bugs
Homoptera: aphids, scales, leafhoppers,
cicadas, whiteflies, mealy bugs
Hymenoptera: bees, wasps, ants, sawflies
Isoptera: termites
Coleoptera: beetles, weevils
Complete
Chewing
Attributes: 400,000 species, hard front wings, beneficial and
pest species, adults and larvae may feed on same host
Dermaptera: earwigs
Gradual
Chewing
Attributes: front wings thickened, pest or beneficial (aphid
predator), nocturnal, hide during the day
Diptera: flies, mosquitoes
Complete
Larvae: chewing/hooks
Adult: sponging, piercing
Attributes: larvae legless, adults soft bodied, compound
eye, one pair of wings, haltere, disease vectors, pest
and beneficial
Hemiptera: true bugs
Gradual
Piercing, sucking
Attributes: nymphs resemble adults, many plant feeding
pests, triangle on back, some predators, some disease
vectors (Chagas disease)
Homoptera: aphids, leaf
hoppers, white flies, scales
Gradual
Sucking
Attributes: small soft bodied insects, unwinged forms, attack
many vegetables, multiple generations, parthenogenesis,
some disease vectors (CTV), greenhouse pests
Hymenoptera: bees, wasps,
ants, sawflies
Complete
Chewing
Attributes: legless larvae, adult stinger, two pair of
membranous wings, ants with narrow waist, many
species, pollinators, parasites, predators, sawflies are
important defoliators, many species social
Isoptera: termites
Gradual
Chewing
Attributes: soft bodied insects, winged or wingless, colonies
occur in ground or in wood, drywood and subterranean
termites, caste system, social
Lepidoptera: moths, butterflies
Complete
Larvae: chewing
Adults: sucking
Attributes: caterpillars, adults have two pairs of scaled
wings, many defoliators, adults feed on nectar, adults
pollinate, basis for ecotourism
Neuroptera: lacewings, antlions
Complete
Chewing
Attributes: adults have 2 pairs of membranous wings, wings
held rooflike, many species are predators
Orthoptera: grasshoppers,
crickets, mantids, cockroaches
Gradual
Chewing
Attributes: hard bodied adult, two pair of wings,
front wings are hard, adults and nymphs cause
damage, moderate pests
Siphonaptera: fleas
Complete
Sucking
Attributes: wingless insects, live as ectoparasites on birds
and mammals, body is laterally flattened, often jumping,
important disease vectors, include plague and typhus
Thysanoptera: thrips
Gradual
Sucking
Attributes: adults are minute soft bodied, two pairs of long
wings, many feed on plants and especially flowers, cause
cosmetic damage to fruit, some disease transmission
Common Insect Orders
Continued
Lepidoptera:
moths, butterflies
Neuroptera: lacewings, antlions
Odonata: dragonflies, damselflies
Orthoptera: grasshoppers, crickets,
mantids, cockroaches
Siphonaptera: fleas
Thysanoptera: thrips
Thysanura: siverfish, firebrats
Movement and Spread
Adults
have wings & legs
Adults can migrate
Larvae have legs
Larvae can walk
Larvae can move with wind
Population Dynamics
Insects
have high reproductive potential
Can migrate; move with plants
Population limited by:
Environmental resistance
Host plant resistance
“if
you build it, they will come”
Exotic (non-native) insects
Concept of a Pest
Interfere
with objectives
Insects play vital ecological roles
1% of insects are pests
Learn to live with damage- economic
threshold
Diagnosing Insect Pest
Problems
Recognize
limitations
Most “sick” plants are abiotic
Identify the plant
Note the symptoms
Look for broad patterns
Within plant (leaf vs. fruit)
Across plant (spot vs. all plants)
Collect
specimens
Diagnosing Insect Pest
Problems Continued
Take
notes
Formulate hypothesis
Important? Seek professional advice
Pest Managment
Integrated
Pest Management
Legislative Control
Physical/Mechanical Control
Cultural Control
Biological Control
Chemical Control
IPM
Integrate
Pest
all approaches to manage pest
ID
Detection, monitoring models
Know insect biology
Ecologically sound
Legislative Control
Quarantine
State
regulation- noxious weeds
Public education critical
Physical Control
Insect
removal/habitat destruction
Sanitation/salvage
Firewood in direct sun
Physical barriers- cutworms
Mass trapping
Trap trees
Cultural Control
Crop
rotation
Green manure fallow
Genetic resistance
Conventional resistant varieties
GMO’s
Biological Control
Ecologically
best strategy
Life history knowledge critical
Classical vs. Bio. insect pest suppression
Bio control agents
Vertebrate predators
Invertebrate predators
Invertebrate parasites
Pathogenic microorganisms
Ex.
Virus, bacteria (Bt), fungi, nematodes
Chemical Control
Limitations:
ecological, cost, hazard
Follow label-legal document
Pay attention to pre-harvest interval
Federal regulation of residual tolerance
Pesticide applicator certification
Summary
Insects
are part of natural system
Provide lots of useful functions
Apply the least effort to reduce economic
threshold
Share the planet!