Insect societies

Both in complexity of behaviour and learning capacity, solitary wasps and bees are the equals of social wasps or honeybees. Social insects, however, have developed a division of labour in which the members must do the work required at the proper time. If the society is to succeed, its needs must be communicated to the individual members, and those individuals must act accordingly. These needs may be met by a temporary change in the behaviour of existing individuals, or they may result in developmental changes that vary the number of individuals in the various castes (e.g., new queens, males, workers, or soldiers). Commonly, both behavioral and developmental changes are initiated by pheromones, chemical messengers that convey information from one member of a colony to another.

Insect societies are gigantic families, with all individuals being the offspring of a single female. In the honeybee the single queen in the hive secretes a pheromone known as the queen substance (oxodecenoic acid), which is taken up by the workers and passed throughout the colony by food sharing. So long as the queen substance is present, all members are informed that the queen is healthy. If the workers are deprived of queen substance, they proceed at once to build queen cells and feed the young larvae with a special salivary secretion known as royal jelly that results in the production of new queens.

All termites and ants and some species of wasps and bees are the only insect groups containing truly social species. However, there are many other species that exhibit some lesser degree of interaction among individuals.

Ecology

Terrestrial insects

Insects feed on every sort of organic matter, and their methods of feeding and digestion have become modified accordingly. The major climatic hazards faced by terrestrial insects are temperature extremes and desiccation. Different species function best at various optimal temperatures. If conditions are too hot, an insect seeks out a cool, moist, and shady spot. If exposed to the sun on a hot day, an insect will position itself so as to present the smallest amount of body surface to the heat. If conditions are too cool, insects will remain in the sun to warm themselves. Many butterflies must spread their wings and expose the large surface to the sun like solar collectors to warm the flight muscles before they can fly. Many moths can raise their temperature by vibrating their wings or “shivering” before taking flight. The heat generated in this way is conserved by hairs or scales that maintain an insulating layer of air around the body. The optimum muscle temperature for flight is from 38 to 40 °C (100 to 104 °F).

In extremely cold weather the danger for insects is freezing, and insects that survive winters in cold latitudes are called cold hardy. A few insects (e.g., some caterpillars and aquatic midge larvae) tolerate ice formation in body fluids, although it is probable that the cell contents do not freeze. In most insects, however, cold hardiness means resistance to freezing. This resistance results partly from accumulation of large quantities of glycerol as an antifreeze and partly from physical changes in the blood that permit supercooling to temperatures far below the freezing point of water without the blood freezing.

Preventing water loss is another important aspect of life in terrestrial environments. All insects have a waxy (lipid) layer that coats the outer surface of the exoskeleton to prevent water loss from the body wall. In addition, most terrestrial insects also have adaptations to avoid water loss through respiration and waste elimination.

Aquatic insects

Major changes required for life in an aquatic habitat include modifications of the legs for swimming and adaptations for respiration. Most aquatic insects swim using the second or third (or both) pairs of legs. In some, the distal (away from the body) leg segments may simply be flattened and serve as oars. In others, there is a row of movable hairs on these segments that fold against the leg to offer less resistance during the forward stroke and then extend out, forming an oarlike surface during the power stroke. In some, like the water striders (Gerridae), long thin legs allow them to “walk” on the surface film of ponds and streams.

To breathe, some insects simply rise to the water surface and take atmospheric air into their tracheal systems. Mosquito larvae use only the last pair of abdominal spiracles, which open at the tip of a respiratory siphon. Water beetles (e.g., Dytiscus) have converted the space between the protective sheaths on the hind wings (elytra) and the abdomen into an air-storage chamber. Air-breathing insects can prolong the period of submergence by trapping air among their surface hairs. This air film acts as a physical gill and makes possible oxygen uptake from water. Other adaptations to an aquatic environment have occurred in larvae that obtain all their oxygen directly from the water. In midge larvae, abundant tracheae (breathing tubes) contact the entire thin cuticle. Caddisfly (Trichoptera) and mayfly (Ephemeroptera) larvae have tracheal gills on the abdomen or thorax. In dragonfly larvae, the gills are inside the rectum, and the water is pumped in and out through the anus, whereas damselflies have external rectal gills.

Protection from enemies

Insects may derive some protection from the horny or leathery cuticle but may also have various chemical defenses. Some caterpillars have special irritating hairs, which break up into barbed fragments that contain a poisonous substance that causes intense itching and serves as a protection against many birds.

Dermal glands of many insects discharge repellent or poisonous secretions over the cuticle, whereas others are protected by poisons that are present continuously in the blood and tissues. Such poisons often are derived from the plants on which the insects feed. In many hymenopterans (ants, bees, wasps) accessory glands in the female reproductive system have become modified to produce toxic proteins. These poisons, injected into the nervous system of the prey, paralyze it. In this state the prey serves as food for the wasp larva. Stings are also used by hymenopterans, including ants, wasps, and bees, for self-defense.

Concealment is an important protective device for insects. For some, this may be accomplished by simply hiding beneath stones or the bark of trees. However, many species rely on some forms of protective coloration. Protective coloration may take the form of camouflage (cryptic coloration) in which the insect blends into its background. The coloration of many insects copies a specific background with extraordinary detail. Stick insects (Carausius) can change their colour to match that of the background by moving pigment granules in their epidermal cells. Some caterpillars also have patterns that develop in response to a background, although these are irreversible. Insects such as caterpillars, which rely on cryptic coloration, often combine it with a rigid deathlike position.

Alternatively, insects that have well-developed chemical defenses generally show conspicuous warning (aposematic) coloration. Experiments have proved that predators such as birds quickly learn to associate such coloration “labels” with nauseous or dangerous prey. Finally, insects without nauseous qualities may gain protection by mimicry—developing a conspicuous colour pattern similar to that found in distasteful species.

Population regulation

The factors that limit the numbers of insect species are complex. Experimental studies of a population of grain beetles in a container of wheat show that the complexities increase if a second species is added. With insects in natural habitats, competing not only with members of their own species but with numerous other species as well, the obstacles to survival become increasingly great. Competition among species is reduced to some extent by specialization of species to niches, or habitats, for which other insects do not compete.

Formerly, controversy arose over whether numbers were always density dependent (i.e., limited by the density of the species itself) or whether catastrophic actions, notably the vagaries of weather, were of prime importance. It has since become generally thought that the ultimate factor in the control of numbers is competition within the species for food and other needs. However, in many circumstances, before competition for food becomes significant, numbers are reduced by external factors. Competition within a species is often reduced by wholesale migration to new localities. Migration may occur by active flight or, as in aphids and locusts, largely directed by the wind. Another important factor in the regulation of populations is balanced polymorphism of species, in which the prevalence of individuals with given characteristics changes according to the action of natural selection as the state of the environment changes.

Form and function

External features

Cuticle

The insect is covered by the cuticle, a layer of inert material laid down by a single sheet of epidermal cells. It consists mainly of chitin, a carbohydrate also known as polyacetylglucosamine, and sclerotin, a hard substance composed of protein tanned by quinones. The cuticle, which has an outer layer of waterproofing wax to prevent loss of water by evaporation, also serves as the skeleton to which the muscles are attached. In insects such as caterpillars, in which the cuticle is soft and flexible, the skeleton is of the hydrostatic type. In this type, body fluid pressure, maintained by muscle tension beneath the body wall, provides the firmness necessary for the function of muscles involved in movement. In insects with hard bodies, the cuticle is made up of hardened areas called sclerites that are connected by flexible joints. At the back of the head and in the thorax, hardened ingrowths of the cuticle, known as apodemes, furnish a kind of internal skeleton for muscular attachment.

Insect colours depend partly on pigments incorporated in the cuticle. However, the most important pigments often occur in epidermal cells below the cuticle. In butterflies and moths, pigments may be deposited in flattened hairs, or scales, covering the wings. Some of the most brilliant insect colours are not the result of pigmentation but are physical interference colours produced by fine laminae (grooves or pits) in the surface of the wing scales or the cuticle itself.

Head

The ancestors of insects most likely had bodies consisting of many similar segments with only minor aggregation of the nervous system in the anterior (head) segment. These primitive insect ancestors probably looked something like modern centipedes, with a pair of appendages on each body segment but without a well-developed head. In present-day insects the primitive segments are grouped into three regions known as the head, thorax, and abdomen.

The first six primitive segments have fused to form the head, and the appendages of these segments have become modified into antennae that bear numerous sense organs and mouthparts that convey food to the mouth. Eyes also are prominent on the head. In most insects the mouthparts, adapted for chewing, consist of several parts; behind the upper lip or labrum is a pair of hard, toothed mandibles. These are followed by a pair of structures called first maxillae, each consisting of a bladelike lacinia, a hoodlike galea, and a segmented palp bearing sense organ. The paired second maxillae are partly fused in the midline to form the lower lip, or labium. Sometimes a median tonguelike structure, called the hypopharynx, arises from the floor of the mouth.

Insect mouthparts have been modified strikingly and reflect particular methods of feeding. The dipterans (true flies) provide instructive examples. In the primitive bloodsucking flies (e.g., the horsefly Tabanus) the mandibles and maxillae form serrated blades that cut through the skin and blood vessels of the host animal. The epipharynx and hypopharynx are elongated and grooved so that, when apposed, they form a tube for sucking blood. The tonguelike labium is used for imbibing exposed fluids. Dipteran mouthparts have evolved in two directions. In the mosquitoes (Culicidae) the mandibles, maxillae, epipharynx, and hypopharynx have become exceedingly slender stylets that form a fine bundle and are used for piercing skin and entering blood vessels. The labium, elongated and deeply grooved, serves only as a sheath for the stylet bundle. In the housefly Musca, however, mandibles and maxillae have been lost; the tonguelike labium alone remains and serves for feeding on exposed surfaces. Certain flies related to Musca have reacquired a capacity to suck blood; however, since they have lost both mandibles and maxillae, a new bloodsucking mechanism has developed. Labial teeth have evolved for cutting through the skin, and the labium itself is plunged into the tissues. The stable fly Stomoxys has an arrangement of this kind. In the tsetse fly Glossina, the labium has become a fine, needlelike structure normally protected by a sheath formed from the palps of the lost maxillae.

Other mouthpart modifications of the mouthpart components provide the cutting and sucking mouthparts of fleas (Siphonaptera), plant-sucking insects (Homoptera), bloodsucking bugs (Heteroptera), honeybees (Hymenoptera), and nectar-feeding butterflies (Lepidoptera).