insect id and management kelly v. tindall extension entomologist twin falls county
TRANSCRIPT
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Insect ID and Management
Kelly V. Tindall
Extension Entomologist
Twin Falls County
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Management Techniques
Integrated Pest Management (IPM):• Management of pests that
incorporates many practices for environmentally friendly and economically feasible control of pests– Physical/Mechanical – barriers, hand
removal– Cultural – proper irrigation– Biological – ladybugs, lacewings, etc.– Chemical – general vs selective
insecticides – Variety selection – tolerance or resistance
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Mechanical/Physical Control
Caulk - Seal off Caulk - Seal off entrances into entrances into homehome
Manual removalManual removalBug-VacBug-Vac
Window screens – Window screens – mechanical mechanical
barrierbarrier
Manually killing Manually killing
Plastic mulchPlastic mulchRemove and burn Remove and burn infested plant infested plant
structuresstructures
Traps & LuresTraps & Lures
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Cultural Control
Proper sanitationProper sanitation
FertilizeFertilizeWaterWater
Wood storageWood storage
WashinWashing plantsg plants
TillageTillage
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Biological ControlPreying mantisPreying mantis
Lacewing larvaLacewing larva
WaspsWasps
LadybugLadybug
Parasitic wasps and fliesParasitic wasps and flies
SpidersSpiders
PathogensPathogens
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SpraysSprays
Chemical Control
Bait systemsBait systems Dormant OilsDormant OilsLocalized applicationsLocalized applications
Pheromone disruptersPheromone disrupters
Insecticidal Insecticidal soaps soaps
General vs
specific insecticid
es
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Variety Selection Three ways plants are resistant• Tolerance
– Plants able to withstand injury better• Antixenosis
– Not-preferred•Too hairy, too waxy•Odorous
• Antibiosis– Toxic to the insect
•Plant compounds with in the plant
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Natural Control (Abiotic)
• Temperature – Hard winters populations– High temps increase insect development
• Rainfall– Drowns soil insects (any stage) – Too dry, insects dry out also
• Sunny versus shady– Some insects have a preference for shaded
areas
• Wind– Increases migration potential
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Identification
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Classification System
• Kingdom (Animalia)• Phylum (Arthropoda)• Class (Insecta)• Order (Hymenoptera)• Family (Apidae)• Genus (Apis)• Species (Mellifera)• Common Name: Honey
Bee
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Why Learn Classification?
•Groups have similar biology and appearance
•More specific groups have closer biology
•Characters relate to damage and pest status
•When a name is known we can look up more information
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Classification System
3 Kingdom
s(1894)
5 Kingdoms
(1959)
6 Kingdoms(1977)
3 Domains(1990)
Protista Monera Eubacteria Bacteria
Plantae Protista Archaebacteria
Archaea
Animalia Fungi Protista Eukarya
Plantae Fungi
Animalia Plantae
Animalia
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Classification System
• Kingdom (Animalia)• Phylum (Arthropoda)• Class (Insecta)• Order (Hymenoptera)• Family (Apidae)• Genus (Apis)• Species (Mellifera)• Common Name: Honey
Bee
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Animalia Characteristics
• Multicellular
• Organelles have
– Nucleus
– No chloroplasts or cell walls
• Move via contractile
proteins
– cilia, flagella, or muscular
organs
• Ingest nutrients
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Classification System
• Kingdom (Animalia)• Phylum (Arthropoda)• Class (Insecta)• Order (Hymenoptera)• Family (Apidae)• Genus (Apis)• Species (Mellifera)• Common Name: Honey
Bee
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Arthropoda Characteristics
• Exoskeleton
• Chitin
• Segmented appendages
• Segmented body
• Bilateral symetry
• Dorsal tubular heart
• Ventral paired nerve
chord
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Classification System
• Kingdom (Animalia)• Phylum (Arthropoda)• Class (Insecta)• Order (Hymenoptera)• Family (Apidae)• Genus (Apis)• Species (Mellifera)• Common Name: Honey
Bee
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Classes of Arthropods
• Arachnida – spiders, mites, ticks
• Diplopoda – millipedes
• Chilopoda – centipedes
• Insecta – insects
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Arachnida Characteristics
•Body divided into two parts
•Four pairs of legs
•No antennae
•No wings
Ticks, mites, spiders, scorpions
Cat-faced Spider
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• Longer antennae than
millipedes• Flattened in cross section• 1 pair of legs per segment• Beneficial – prey on other
arthropods• Are fast moving• Have poison glands & can
inflict a painful bite
ChilopodaCentipedes
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• Feed on fungi and decaying plants
• Can damage plants
• 2 pair of legs per segment
• 2 visible body parts – head and body
• Round in cross section
• Slow moving
DilopodaMillipedes
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Insecta Characteristics• Mandibulate
– Mouth consists of mandible, maxilla & labia
• 3 body segments– Head
– Thorax
– Abdomen
• Pair of antenna
• Most have compound eyes
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Classification System
• Kingdom (Animalia)• Phylum (Arthropoda)• Class (Insecta)• Order (Hymenoptera)• Family (Apidae)• Genus (Apis)• Species (Mellifera)• Common Name: Honey
Bee
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Orders of Insects• Collembola – spring tails• Thysanura – silver fish• Ephemerptera – maylfies• Odanota – dragonflies• Phasmida – walking sticks• Orthoptera -
grasshoppers• Mantodea – preying
mantids• Blattaria - roaches• Isoptera - termites• Dermaptera - earwigs• Plecoptera - stoneflies• Psocoptera – book & bark
lice• Phthiraptera – true lice
• Hemiptera – true bugs
• Homoptera – aphids/hoppers
• Thysanoptera - thrips
• Neuroptera – lace wings
• Coleoptera - beetles
• Mecoptera – scorpionfly
• Siphonaptera - fleas
• Diptera – flies, mosquitoes
• Tricoptera - caddisflies
• Lepidoptera – butterfly/moth
• Hymenoptera – ants, wasps, bees
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No. of Species per Order
Protura Collembola
Diplura Microcoryphia
Thysanura Ephemerptera
Odanota Grylloblattaria
Phasmida Orthopthera
Mantodea Blattaria
Isoptera Dermaptera
Embiidina Plecoptera
Zoraptera Psocoptera
Phthiraptera Hemiptera
Homoptera Thysanoptera
Neuroptera Coleoptera
Strepsistra Mecoptera
Siphonaptera Diptera
Trichoptera Lepidoptera
Hymenoptera
Coleoptera
Diptera
Lepidoptera
Hem
ipte
raHymenoptera
Aprx. 800,000 species
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Helpful Hints for Identification
• Pictures
• Specimens from a collection
• Biology – Habitat – soil, wood, plant, food, aquatic
– Sometimes host specific
– Characteristic damage patterns
– Time of year may help
• Rear immatures to adults
• Keys
• Ask the expert
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Websites• http://www.insectimages.org/search/
index.cfm
• http://www.entomology.ksu.edu/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabindex=165&tabid=86
• http://www.uky.edu/Agriculture/CritterFiles/casefile/insects/bugs/stinkbugs/stinkbugs.htm
• http://www.cropproductionbasics.com/moth_identification.htm
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Characteristics of an Adult
Thorax:•Locomotor appendages•3 pairs of true legs•1 or 2 pairs of wings
Head:•Pair of antennae•Pair of mandibles
Abdomen:•Genitalia at the end•Spiracles
head
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Characteristics of Larvae
HeadThorax:(1st 3 segments after head; true legs)
Abdomen:Prolegs
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Head of Insect
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Head of Insect
Genae‘Cheeks’
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Head of Insect
Compound eyes
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Head of Insect
OcelliSimple eyes
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Head of Insect
Antennae
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Head of Insect
Clypeus
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Head of Insect
Frons
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Head of Insect
Mouth
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Head of Insect
Labrum
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Head of Insect
Mandibles
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Head of Insect
Maxilla
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Head of Insect
Labium
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Antennal Types
Setaceous• Bristle-like • Dragonfly
Filiform• Thread-like • Cockroaches• Ground beetles
Moniliform• Bead-like • Termites
Serrate• Sawtoothed • Click beetles
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Antennal Types
Clavate• Gradually clubbed • Carrior beetles
Capitate• Abruptly clubbed • Butterflies
Pectinate• Comb-like • Male glow-worms
Geniculate• Elbowed • Ants• Weevils
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Antennal Types
Lamellate• Nested plates • Scarab beetles (June bugs)
Pulmose• Feather-like • Mosquitoes• Male moths
Aristate• Pouch-like with lateral bristles• Flies
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Mouth Parts
Sucking (fly)
Chewing-sucking(carpenter bee)
Piercing-sucking
(hemipteran)
(mosquito)
Chewing
Sucking
(moth)
(wasp)
(weevil – beetle)
(stag beetle)
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Mouth Parts of the OrdersChewing
• Collembola• Thysanura• Ephemerptera
*• Odanota• Phasmida• Orthoptera• Mantodea• Blattaria• Isoptera• Dermaptera• Plecoptera
Sucking• Hemiptera• Homoptera• Phthiraptera• Thysanoptera• Siphonaptera*• Diptera*• Tricoptera*• Lepidoptera*• Hymenoptera*
* Mouthparts are different on immature and adult forms
• Psocoptera• Phthiraptera• Neuroptera• Coleoptera• Mecoptera• Siphonaptera*• Diptera*• Tricoptera*• Lepidoptera*• Hymenoptera*
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ThoraxProthorax:1st thoracic segment1st pair of legs
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ThoraxMesothorax:Middle segment of thorax2nd pair of legs1st pair of wings (forewing)
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ThoraxMetathorax:Last segment of thorax3rd pair of legs2nd pair of wings (hindwings)
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Wing Types
Elytra • Hard, sclerotized front wings that as protect membranous hind wings • Coleoptera• Dermaptera
Hemelytra• Front wings that are leathery at the base and membranous near the tip• Hemiptera
Tegmina• Front wings are completely leathery or parchment-like in texture• Orthoptera• Blattodea• Mantodea
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Wing Types
Halteres • Small, club-like hind wings• Diptera
Fringed wings• Slender wings with long fringes of hair• Thysanaptera
Hairy wings• Front and hind wings covered with setae• Trichoptera
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Wing Types
Scaly wings• Front and hind wings covered with scales• Lepidoptera
Frenulum• Bristle near base of hind wing that holds front and hind wings together • LepidopteraS
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Wing Types
Hamuli• Tiny hooks on hind wing that hold front and hind wings together • Hymenoptera
Membranous• Clear wings with many veins• Wings may be tinted with color or banded-pattern• Odanota• Neuroptera
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Insect Legscoxa - the basal segment of the insect leg (ball joint where human leg fits into thigh)
tarsus - the part of the leg beyond the tibia (foot)
trochanter - segment between coxa and femur
femur - the third leg segment, (human thigh bone)tibia - the fourth leg segment, (shin bone)
coxa
trochanter
femur
tibia
tarsus
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Insect LegsCursorial – runningRoachesTiger beetles
Fossorial - diggingMole cricket
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Insect LegsNatorial – swimmingWhirligig beetlesBack swimmersWater boatmen
Saltorial - jumpingGrasshoppers
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Insect Leggs
Ratptorial – graspingPreying mantid
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Abdomen
• Multiple segments• Spiracles present on abdominal segments• May have appendages on last segment• Genitalia present on abdomen
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Spiracles
• Used for respiration• Usually 1 – 10 pairs• Can be important for ID purposes (maggot larvae)
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Abdominal Appendages
Cerci • Paired abdominal segments• Sensory or defensive in nature• Often reduced or retracted into the body
MayflyRoach
Earwig Silverfish
Cornicles • Tubular structures on the 5th or 6th segment• Secrete defensive fluids
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Metamorphosis• Simple
– external wing development (if winged), no period of inactivity
– Ametabolous– Hemimetabolous– Paurometabolous
• Intermediate– External wing pads & internal development,
period of inactivity
• Complete– Internal wing development, period of
inactivity
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Simple Metamorphosis
AmetabolousImmatures look identical to adult only smaller (silverfish)
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Simple Metamorphosis
HemimetabolousImmatures (niads) look different than adult – NO PUPA (mayflies and odanates)
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Simple Metamorphosis
Paurometabolous• Immatures (nymphs) look similar to adult• Gradual development of wing pads externally• Homoptera, Hemiptera & other orders
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Incomplete Metamorphosis
Intermediate• Immatures (nymphs) look similar to adult• Some internal wing development • prepupal and pupal stages (period of inactivity)
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Complete Metamorphosis
Holometabolous• Immatures (larvae/ maggots) look different than adult • Pupa formed• Bettles, diptera, lepidoptera, hymenoptera); • Internal wing development
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Type of Metamorphosis by Order
Simple (A)• Collembola • Thysanura
Complete• Neuroptera• Coleoptera• Mecoptera• Siphonaptera• Diptera• Tricoptera• Lepidoptera• Hymenoptera
A= ametabolous; H= hemimetabolous; P= paurometabolous
Simple (H)• Ephemerpter
a• Odanota • Plecoptera
Simple (P)• Phasmida • Orthoptera• Mantodea• Blattaria• Isoptera• Dermaptera• Psocoptera • Phthirapter
a• Hemiptera• Homoptera• Psocoptera
Intermediate• Thysanoptera
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Larval TypesVermiform• Maggot-like, worm-like• Legless• With or without a developed head
http://comp.uark.edu/~pjmcleod/corn/Fig12.jpg
Elateriform• Wireworm-like• Elongate body• Cylicrical• Hardshelled• Short legs
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Larval Typeswww.ento.okstate.edu
Eruciform• Caterpillar-like• Cylindrical body• Well developed head• Short antennae• Thoracic and prolegs
Campodeiform• Elongate body• Somewhat flattened• Usually well developed antennae• Active
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Larval Types
Marlin E. Rice
Scarabaeiform
• Grub-like
• Usually curved (C-
shaped)
• Well developed head
• Thoracic legs, NO
prolegs
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Larval Types by Order
Eruciform:• Lepidoptera• Mecoptera• Hymenopter
a*
Scarabaeiform:• Coleoptera*
Campodeiform:
• Neuroptera• Tricoptera• Coleoptera
Elateriform:• Coleoptera*
Vermiform:• Diptera• Siphonaptera• Hymenoptera • Coleoptera*• Lepidoptera*
* Not the most common larval form of the order
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Pupal TypesObtect
• Appendages
more or less glued
to body
• May be covered
by cocoon
• Lepidoptera,
some Diptera
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Pupal TypesExerate
• Appendages free
• Not covered by cocoon
• “mummified adult”
• Most insects with complete
metamorphosis – NOT
Lepidopteran or Diptera
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Pupal Types
Coarctate
•Like exerate but
covered with
hardened cuticle
•Some Diptera
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Orders of Insects• Collembola – spring tails• Thysanura – silver fish• Ephemerptera – maylfies• Odanota – dragonflies• Phasmida – walking sticks• Orthoptera -
grasshoppers• Mantodea – preying
mantids• Blattaria - roaches• Isoptera - termites• Dermaptera - earwigs• Plecoptera - stoneflies• Psocoptera – book & bark
lice• Phthiraptera – true lice
• Hemiptera – true bugs
• Homoptera – aphids/hoppers
• Thysanoptera - thrips
• Neuroptera – lace wings
• Coleoptera - beetles
• Mecoptera – scorpionfly
• Siphonaptera - fleas
• Diptera – flies, mosquitoes
• Tricoptera - caddisflies
• Lepidoptera – butterfly/moth
• Hymenoptera – ants, wasps, bees
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Collembola• Wingless
• Small
• Hop with tail
appendage (furcula)
• Nuisance, rarely pests
• Soil, leaf litter
• Metamorphosis:
young resemble
adults
Springtails
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Thysanura
• Wingless• Long antennae• Three tails• Scales on the body• Nuisance, pests in
libraries• Mouthparts:
Chewing• Metamorphosis:
Young resemble adults
Silverfish and Firebrats
Silverfish
Firebrat
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Ephemeroptera• Upright wings• Only group to molt
once winged• Elongate body• Three tails• Fish food,
occasional nuisance• Mouth parts:
chewing• Metamorphosis:
aquatic immatures, winged adults
Mayflies
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Odonata• Two pairs of
membranous wings
• Large conspicuous eyes
• Dragonflies hold wings flat
• Damselflies hold wings together
• Beneficial predators
Dragonflies and damselflies
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Plecoptera
• Large soft-bodied insects
• Four wings held flat over the back
• Hind pair fold fan-like
• Long antennae
• Larvae are aquatic
• Fish food, scavengers
Stoneflies
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Orthoptera• Front pair of wings
usually slender and leathery
• Hind pair of wings broad and fan-like
• Characteristic jumping hind leg
• Plant pests, few predators
Grasshoppers, Crickets, Katydids
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Crickets
Mormon Cricket
Field Cricket
House Cricket
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Katydids
Chapparal Katydid
Broad-winged KatydidFork-tailed Bush Katydid
True Katydid
Mormon Cricket
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Blattaria• Flattened bodies• Head is concealed
from above• Two pairs of wings• Eggs in a capsule
called an ootheca• Unpleasant odor• Household pests
Cockroaches
American Cockroach
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Mantodea• Large, elongate & slow
moving
• Front legs grasp prey
• Biological control agents
• Leaf mimics
Mantids
EggsEggs
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Praying Mantis
California MantisChinese Mantis
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Phasmida
• Elongated bodies
• Slow moving
• Found on trees or shrubs
• Wingless as adults
• Foliage feeder
• Rarely a pest
Walkingsticks
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Dermaptera• Medium sized insects
• Four wings
• Hind wings are folded under front
• Abdomen exposed
• Cerci on last abdominal segment
• Predators
• Nuisance pests, chew on foliage
Earwigs
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Isoptera• Small, soft bodied
• Yellowish or whitish insects
• Wide waist, bead-like antennae (not bent)
• Liven in colonies in wood
• Three castes: workers, soldiers and reproductives
• Structural pests
Termites
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Head of Insect
Clypeus
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Psocoptera• Tiny, soft-bodied
insects
• Four wings or none at all
• Microscopic to ¼ inch
• “Busted upper lip” (swollen clypeus)
• Scavengers, pests in libraries and stored food, webbing on trees
Psocids (Booklice)
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Phthiraptera
• Wingless parasites
on most birds and
mammals
• Deposit eggs on
hair or feathers
• Bloodsucking,
transmit diseases
LiceHead Lice
Crab Lice
Head Lice
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Thysanpotera• Tiny insects about 1/8 in
long
• Two pair of slender wings, fringed with long hair
• Legs and antennae are short
• Only pest with asymmetrical mouthparts
• Plant pests, minor bites of humans, frequent pests in greenhouses and blooms
Thrips
Western Flower Thrips
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Hemiptera• Four wings, folded flat• Front pair are thickened and
leathery• Beak arises from the front of head• Plant feeders, predators
True Bugs
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True Bugs
BackswimmerBed bugStink bug
Leaf-footed bugTarnished plant bug
Giant water bug
Assassin bugMilkweed bug
Adults
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True Bugs
BackswimmerBed bugStink bug
Leaf-footed bugTarnished plant bug
Giant water bug
Assassin bug Milkweed bug
Nymphs
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Homoptera• May or may not have wings• Four wings when present and are held
roof-like over body• Feed on plants• Mouthparts: sucking with beak arising
from the hind part of the head• Metamorphosis: Gradual• Many are pests and can transmit
diseases
Leafhoppers, Scales, Aphids, Mealybugs
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Leafhoppers
Scarlet & Green LeafhopperPotato Leafhopper
Rose LeafhopperBeet Leafhopper
Spines on hind tibia
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Scales
•Female – host specific, no antenna, legless & wingless
•Male – 1 pair wings, 1 pair haltere; only reproduce, antenna
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Aphids
• Plant specific
• Transmit viruses
• Cornicles – “tail pipes”
• Symbiotic relationship with
ants
• Give live birth
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Mealybugs
• They feed on all parts of the plant, including roots, and reproduce all summer• Many times they are controlled by natural enemies
• Characteristic trait: body covered with wax or filamentous waxy secretions
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Neuroptera
• Fragile insects
• Two pair of many veined
wings – held roof-like
over their abdomen
• Long antennae
• Many
beneficial/predators
Lacewings, Antlions
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Lacewings
Brown Lacewing
Green Lacewing
Lacewing Nest
Lacewing Larva
Lacewing Eggs
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Antlions
Antlion Larvae
Antlion Adults
Larvae live in the soil and seek prey
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Coleoptera• Largest order of
insects
• Usually two pairs of wings
• Front pair are thick (elytra)
• Straight line down the middle of back
• Plant feeders, predators, scavengers, wood borers, etc
Beetles & Weevils
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Weevils
Boll Weevil
Pecan Weevil
Rose WeevilAlfalfa Weevil
• Many are
economic pests
• Elongated
rostrum (nose)
• Like to play
dead
Immature weevils
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June Beetle/White Grub
Adults• 1/2 to 5/8 inches long• Reddish brown • Noctural • Can be a nuisance near light
Larvae (grubs):• C-shaped• White with brown head• Three pairs of legs• Soil-dwelling• Feed on roots of grasses
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Carpet BeetlesAdult:• Small, stout, robust, or elongate ovalLarva:• Usually covered with hairs
Scavengers of plant and animal products
• the ‘CSI’ bug (forensics)• leather, skins• museum specimens• wool• stored foods• carrion (‘bone cleaners’)
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Cucumber Beetle
• Phytophagous (plant eaters)• Usually oval shaped• Can be colorful with stripes or spotted markings (may fade with age) • Prefer shady cool places such as leaf and melon undersides • Keep leaves dry; lift fruits to keep the underside dry• Adults overwinter in weedy areas – therefore keep weeds cut down all year
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Ladybird Beetles• 1st biological control agent (cottony cushion scale)• Predators of aphids & eggs
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Mecoptera• Small to medium sized• Four long, narrow wings• Long antennae• Larvae look like
caterpillars• Larvae live in damp soil• Adults are seasonal in
summer• Adults feed on insects• Harmless
Scorpionflies
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Diptera• Winged or wingless • One pair of membranous
wings – one pair halteres
• Few feed on plant foliage
• Some of the most beneficial insects
• Beneficial as pollinators, parasites & predator, stings are a nuisance
True Flies, Mosquitoes, Gnats, Midges
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True Flies
House Fly
Cherry Fruit FlyDeer Fly
Horse Fly
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Mosquitoes• Larvae are aquatic • Tiny hairs outline the margins of wings• Adults feed on nectar or blood (females only)• Females must have blood meal to produce young • Crepuscular or nocturnal• Males - plumose antenna
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Hymenoptera• Winged or Wingless• Two pair of membranous
wings• Few feed on plant foliage• Many beneficial insects -
pollinators, parasites & predators
• Stings are a nuisance• Complete metamorphosis• Many social insects
Ants, bees, wasps, hornets, sawflies
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Carpenter Ants
• Black in color
• Build nests in old
trees and logs
• May invade
homes in search
of food
Queen
Nest
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Red Harvester Ants
• Will sting or bite
• Colonies occur in open areas
• Do not invade homes
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Honey Bees• Social insects• Division of labor:
• queen –matriarch of the colony, lays eggs• drones – males, only purpose to mate; kicked out in rough times• workers – females, tend to all duties (care for larvae and queen, food collection, etc)
• Communication - ‘Waggle Dance’
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Yellow Jackets & Hornets
Bald-faced Hornet• Very aggressive
• Distinguished from bees
by their thin "waists"
• Fold their wings
lengthwise when at rest
• Prey on a variety of
arthropods, may forage on
human (especially sweets
and meats)
• Considered beneficial
insects
Paper Wasps
Western Yellow Jacket
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SawfliesAdult
• Adults resemble bees or small wasps• Larvae resemble caterpillars
• >5 pairs of abdominal prolegs• Often spotted or striped• ½ to 1 inch long• External feeders on foliage
• Entire leaf or skeletonize • Often clump together
• Wide host range including: conifers, oaks, black locust, ash, black walnut & woody ornamentals
Larvae
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SawfliesBlue Steel Sawfly • Small infestations -
manually remove and destroy • Large infestations of young larvae - spray with horticultural oil• Large larvae - spray with a contact insecticide. • Sawfly larvae are not caterpillars; Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) formulations for caterpillar control will not kill sawflies
Larvae
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Trichoptera• Soft bodied• Two pairs of wings covered
with silky hairs• Adults have long antennae• Adults resemble small dull-
colored moths• Larvae are usually
scavengers• Larvae build cases from
pepples or bits of sticks; often found in the cases – with heads only protruding
• Fish food, rarely a nuisance
Caddisflies
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Lepidoptera
• Four well-developed wings
• Wings have overlapping scales
• Caterpillars on leaves of plants
• Leaf feeders• Few are beneficial
Moths & Butterflies
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Looper
Corn Earworm
Cutworm
Armyworm
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Banded Woolly Bear
Clothes Moth
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Western Tiger Swallowtail Anise Swallowtail
Hummingbird Moth Painted Lady
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Cabbage White Common Branded Skipper
Western Sulpher Pink-spotted Hawk Moth
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Mourning Cloak European Skipper
Monarch & Caterpillar Two-tailed Swallowtail
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• Small, wingless body
• Flattened laterally
• Larvae in nests of various animals
• Pests of animals and man
SiphonapteraFleas
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Insects of Special Interest
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Earwigs• Scary appearance, but
harmless• May emit a foul-
smelling, yellowish-brown liquid
• Noctural• Live live outdoors and
rarely establish themselves indoors
• Can ‘pinch’ with the forceps
• Predators
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Earwigs• Serious feeding
damage may occur on flowers, vegetables, fruits and other plants– Leaves have a ragged
appearance with the numerous, small, irregular holes.
– Considered temporary pests
– Can occur in large populations
• Consume decomposing organic matter
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Earwigs• Tanglefoot (sticky
trap) around tree trunks prevent them from crawling up trees
• Well maintained garden deters large infestations
• Baits are available for control
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Leaf Miners• Several kinds of
leaf miners: beetles, flies, sawflies, and caterpillars
• Adult lay eggs and the immatures do the actual mining
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Leaf Miners• Host range: fruit
trees, grape vines, berry vines, grain crops, garden flowers, wildflowers, vegetables and weeds
• Usually not of economic concern– Birches and foreign species
of elms attacked by a sawfly leaf miner drop most of the leaves may die
– Damage to vegetables and some flowers may be serious
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Leaf Rollers• Caterpillars protect
themselves while they feed– by rolling themselves
up in a leaf or in several leaves of their host plant
• Difficult to control with insecticides because they are protected in the leaf Marlin E. Rice
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Aphids
Green Apple Aphid
Wooly Apple Aphid
Rose Aphid
Pea Aphid
Rosy Apple Aphid
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Coddling Moth• A destructive pest
introduced from Europe by settlers
• Female moths lay the scale-like eggs singly on developing fruit or adjacent leaves or stems
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Coddling MothLarvae:
– hatch and enter the side of the fruit and tunnel to the center
– pinkish to white in color with a brown head
– up to 3/4 inch long – exit the fruit to pupate
in a thick silken cocoon on the bark or other protected areas
– frass is often noticed near larvae entered
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SpittlebugsNymphs: • Small, green, soft-bodied
insects • Surrounded by a frothy, white
mass • Protection from drying out and
predatorsAdults • small (¼ inch), winged insects • fly away quickly when disturbed • lay their eggs inside of stems or
between the leaf blades and stems
Hosts: ornamental, vegetable and garden plants, forage crops, conifers, grasses and weeds
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SpittlebugsDamage• Adults & nymphs suck sap
Inject toxin into a plant's vascular system
• Leaves appear distorted, yellow and/or stunted
Control: • Spray with a sharp stream of
water to dislodge spittlebugs and wash froth away – some small spittlebugs will dry
out – insecticidal soaps may also be
effective on spittlebugs
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Snailcase bagworm
Introduced into the United States from Europe around 1940
Larvae• Produce a protective bag
covered with small particles of soil, resembles a snail shell
• Lives inside this bag until becoming an adult
• Bag grows as the larvae grow (aprx. 1/4 in)
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Snailcase bagworm• Escape detection because
small and resembles soil• Noticed when damage
appears• Nuisance - attach to house
siding, automobiles, trees, or fence posts in large numbers– Tight attachment - paint often
removed when dislodged• Problematic because:
– feeds on many different plants– females reproduce without
mating– carried long distances by
mammals, birds, or humans
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Snailcase bagworm
Damage • Feed on leaf tissue• Mine circular areas beneath
the surface layer• Potential nursery pest• Baby's breath is highly
susceptibleControl• Must control on the host plant
prior to their migration to a pupation site
• Chemicals ineffective on pupae• Manual control (hand removal/
killing) is only effective control
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Non-Insects
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Arachnida Characteristics
•Body divided into two parts
•Four pairs of legs
•No antennae
•No wings
Ticks, mites, spiders, scorpions
Cat-faced Spider
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Orders of Arachnids
• Araneae – spiders
• Acari – mites, ticks
• Scorpiones – scorpions
• Opiliones - harvestmen
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Araneae• Wingless and lack
antennae
• Six or eight legs
• Body variable in size and
shape
• All food intake is liquid
• Webs to capture prey
• All are beneficial, few are
hazardous
Spiders
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Spider Facts• Hundreds of species in Idaho
• All are beneficial
• Almost all have venom
• Hazardous spiders include
black widow and hobo spiders
• Reactions vary with individual
Black widow-male
Black widow - female
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Acari Characteristics
• Wingless, lack antennae
• Body is flat or round
• Adults have eight legs
• Ticks only feed on blood of animals
• Four stages; egg, larva, nymph and adult
Ticks & Mites
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Ticks
Rocky Mountain Spotted Tick
Dog Tick
• Ectoparisite – feeds on blood• Tick bites look like mosquito bites, but can also bruise or resemble a bullseye. • Often found in tall grasses • Can transmit human diseases:
• relapsing fever• Lyme disease• Rocky Mountain spotted fever• tularemia• equine encephalitis• several forms of ehrlichiosis
• Can transmit livestock diseases: babesiosis & anaplasmosis
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Mites• Diverse and successful • Exploit an incredible array of habitats • Because they are small most go totally unnoticed• Many live freely in the soil or water, some live as parasites on plants or animals.• Some of the plant pests include the so-called Spider mites; Gall mites • Sarcoptic Mange mites which burrow under the skin• Perhaps the most well known, though, is the house dust mite • Insects may also have parasitic mites. (Varroa mites which attaches to the body of the honeybee)
Reproductive colony of plant mites
Peacock mite
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Scorpionida Characteristics
• Wingless • Lack Antennae• Bodies are broad• Tail with a sting
at the tip• Front
appendages are enlarged pinchers
• Size from 1-3 inches
• Mouthparts: chewing• Metamorphosis:
Gradual• Status: Beneficial
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Scorpions• More species as
you go west
• 18 to 25 in Idaho
• Stings are painful
but not fatal
unless very
sensitive