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Hemiptera facts for kids

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Hemiptera
Temporal range: Moscovian–Holocene, 307–0Ma
Acanthasoma hamorrhoidale adult.jpg
Acanthosoma haemorrhoidale, a shield bug
Aphid-colored.jpg
Aphids
Scientific classification
Suborders
  • Auchenorrhyncha
  • Coleorrhyncha
  • Heteroptera
  • Sternorrhyncha
Fulgoroidea Crato Formation Brazil
Fossil planthopper (Fulgoromorpha) from the Early Cretaceous Crato Formation of Brazil, c. 116 mya

True bugs are an order of insects. Biologists call true bugs the Hemiptera. There are around 80,000 species of true bugs. The word bug by itself can have other meanings.

Naming

The name "Hemiptera" is from the Greek: it means hemi (half) and pteron (wing). Most true bugs have half of their front wings hardened and have the other half soft. These wings are called hemelytra (singular hemelytron), because they halfway look like the hard wings (elytra) of beetles. The hind wings are totally soft and are shorter than the front wings.

Diversity

There are many different kinds of true bugs, some of which are aphids, cicadas, planthoppers, shield bugs, and others. All of these are true bugs. Their size is from 1 mm to over 10 cm. All true bugs have similar mouthparts, which they use to suck up plant sap.


Other insects Annualreportofag1119021903univ 0052AA2 Figure 1.jpg


Paraneoptera

Psocoptera (barklice) Psocoptera icon.png



Hemiptera
(exc. Sternorrhyncha)
Auchenorrhyncha

Fulgoromorpha (planthoppers) Acanaloniidae.jpg



Cicadomorpha (cicadas, leafhoppers, spittlebugs, etc) Marbaarus bubalus Distant.jpg





Coleorrhyncha (moss bugs) HEMI Peloridiidae Oiophysa distincta 1.png



Heteroptera (shield bugs, assassin bugs, etc) Bug (PSF).jpg






Sternorrhyncha (aphids) Aphid icon.png




Thysanoptera (thrips) Taeniothrips inconsequens.jpg



Liposcelididae (booklice) Liposcelis icon.png + Phthiraptera (lice) Lipeurus forficulatus f.png







Hemiptera suborders
Suborder No. of Species First appearance Examples Characteristics
Auchenorrhyncha over 42,000 Lower Permian cicadas, leafhoppers, treehoppers, planthoppers, froghoppers plant-sucking bugs; many can jump; many make calls, some loud
Coleorrhyncha fewer than 30 Lower Jurassic moss bugs (Peloridiidae) evolved in the southern palaeo-continent of Gondwana
Heteroptera 25,000 Triassic shield bugs, seed bugs, assassin bugs, flower bugs, sweetpotato bugs, water bugs larger bugs, often predatory
Sternorrhyncha 12,500 Upper Permian aphids, whiteflies, scale insects plant-sucking bugs, some major horticultural pests; most are sedentary or fully sessile;

Features of true bugs

Characteristics

HemipteraMouthparts
Hemipteran mouthparts are distinctive, with mandibles and maxillae modified to form a piercing "stylet" sheathed within a modified labium.

The defining feature of hemipterans is their "beak". The stylet is capable of piercing tissues and sucking liquids. The stylet contains a channel for the outward movement of saliva and another for the inward movement of liquid food. The beak is usually folded under the body when not in use.

The diet is typically plant sap, but some hemipterans such as assassin bugs are blood-suckers, and a few are predators.

The forewings of Hemiptera are either entirely membranous or partially hardened.

The antennae in Hemiptera typically consist of four or five segments, although they can still be quite long, and the tarsi of the legs have two or three segments.

Life cycle

Ant-mimic predatory bug, Myrmecoris gracilis, on Yarrow
An ant-mimicking predatory bug Myrmecoris gracilis

Hemipterans are hemimetabolous, meaning that they do not undergo metamorphosis, the complete change of form between a larval phase and an adult phase. Instead, their young are called nymphs, and resemble the adults. The nymphs moult several times as they grow, and each instar resembles the adult more than the previous one. Wing buds grow in later stage nymphs and the final transformation involving little more than the development of functional wings (if they are present at all) and functioning sexual organs, with no intervening pupal stage as in holometabolous insects.

Parthenogenesis and vivipary

Aphid-giving-birth
Aphid giving birth to live female young

Many aphids are parthenogenetic during part of the life cycle, such that females can produce unfertilized eggs, which are clones of their mother. All such young are female (thelytoky), so 100% of the population at these times can produce more offspring. Many species of aphid are also viviparous: the young are born live rather than laid as eggs. These adaptations enable aphids to reproduce extremely rapidly when conditions are suitable.

Ecological roles

As herbivores

Most hemipterans use their sucking and piercing mouthparts to feed on plant sap. These include cicadas, leafhoppers, treehoppers, planthoppers, froghoppers, aphids, whiteflies, scale insects, and some other groups. Some feed on many species of plant. Some sap-suckers move from one host to another at different times of year.

Phloem sap is a sugary liquid low in amino acids, and insects have to process large quantities in order to meet their nutritional requirements for growth.

Common jassid nymphs and ants02
Leafhoppers protected by meat ants

As symbionts

Some species of ant protect and farm aphids (Sternorrhyncha) and other sap-sucking hemipterans, gathering and eating the honeydew that these hemipterans secrete. The relationship is symbiotic, as both ant and aphid benefit.

Some leafhoppers (Auchenorrhyncha) are similarly "milked" by ants. In the Corcovado rain forest of Costa Rica, wasps compete with ants to protect and milk leafhoppers; the leafhoppers preferentially gave more honeydew, more often, to the wasps, which were larger and may have offered better protection.

As predators

Reduvius personatus, Masked Hunter Bug nymph camouflaged with sand grains
Masked hunter nymph camouflaged with sand grains

Most other hemipterans are predatory, feeding on other insects, or even small vertebrates. The predatory shield bug for example stabs caterpillars with its beak and sucks out the body fluids. The nymph of Reduvius personatus, the masked hunter bug, camouflages itself with layers of particles on its body; it can give a painful bite.

As parasites

A few hemipterans are parasitic, feeding on the blood of larger animals. These include bedbugs and the triatomine kissing bugs of the assassin bug family Reduviidae, which can transmit the dangerous Chagas disease.

Wasserläufer bei der Paarung crop
Pondskaters Aquarius najas mating

Aquatic

Several families of Hemiptera are water bugs, adapted to an aquatic lifestyle, such as the water boatmen and water scorpions. They are mostly predatory, and have legs adapted as paddles to help the animal move through the water. The "pondskaters" or "water striders" of the family Gerridae are also associated with water, but use the surface tension of standing water to keep them above the surface; they include the sea skaters in the genus Halobates, the only truly marine group of insects.

Interaction with humans

Icerya purchasi 1435060
Colony of cottony cushion scale, a pest of citrus fruits

As pests

Although many species of Hemiptera are significant pests of crops and garden plants, including many species of aphid and scale insects, other species are harmless.

Significant pests include the cottony cushion scale, a pest of citrus fruit trees, the green peach aphid and other aphids which attack crops worldwide and transmit diseases, and jumping plant lice which are often host plant-specific and transmit diseases.

Insect products

Indian collecting cochineal
Cochineal scale insects being collected from a prickly pear in Central America. Illustration by José Antonio de Alzate y Ramírez, 1777

Other hemipterans have positive uses for humans, such as in the production of the dyestuffs cochineal and carmine. The scale insect Dactylopius coccus produces the brilliant red-coloured carminic acid to deter predators. Up to 100,000 scale insects need to be collected and processed to make a kilogram (2.2 lbs) of cochineal dye. A similar number of lac bugs are needed to make a kilogram of shellac, a brush-on colourant and wood finish. Additional uses of this traditional product include the waxing of citrus fruits to extend their shelf-life, and the coating of pills to moisture-proof them, provide slow-release or mask the taste of bitter ingredients.

As human parasites and disease vectors

Bed bug, Cimex lectularius
Bed bug nymph, Cimex lectularius, engorged with human blood

Chagas disease is a modern day tropical disease caused by Trypanosoma cruzi and transmitted by kissing bugs, so-called because they suck human blood from around the lips while a person sleeps.

The bed bug is an external parasite of humans. It lives in bedding and is mainly active at night, feeding on human blood, generally without being noticed.

As food

Deepfried cicada
Deep-fried cicadas, Cryptotympana atrata, in Chinese Shandong cuisine

Some large cicadas are used as food in Asian countries such as China, and they are much esteemed in Malawi and other African countries. Insects have a high protein content and good food conversion ratios, but most hemipterans are too small to be a useful component of the human diet.

In art and literature

Cicadas have featured in literature since the time of Homer's Iliad, and as motifs in decorative art from the Chinese Shang dynasty (1766-1122 B.C.). They are described by Aristotle in his History of Animals and by Pliny the Elder in his Natural History; their mechanism of sound production is mentioned by Hesiod in his poem Works and Days "when the Skolymus flowers, and the tuneful Tettix sitting on his tree in the weary summer season pours forth from under his wings his shrill song".

In mythology and folklore

Among the bugs, cicadas in particular have been used as money, in folk medicine, to forecast the weather, to provide song (in China), and in folklore and myths around the world.

Images for kids

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Hemípteros para niños

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