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TYPES OF INSECT’S LEGS

TYPES OF INSECT’S LEGS. CURSORIAL Wakling, running Ground beetles, cockroach. FOSSORIAL Front leg, digging soil Mole cricket. RAPTATORIAL Fore leg, adapted for catching prey Praying mantis. SALTATORIAL Hind leg, jumping Enlarge femur grasshoppers. NATATORIAL For swimmng With hairs

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TYPES OF INSECT’S LEGS

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  1. TYPES OF INSECT’S LEGS • CURSORIAL • Wakling, running • Ground beetles, cockroach

  2. FOSSORIAL • Front leg, digging soil • Mole cricket

  3. RAPTATORIAL • Fore leg, adapted for catching prey • Praying mantis

  4. SALTATORIAL • Hind leg, jumping • Enlarge femur • grasshoppers

  5. NATATORIAL • For swimmng • With hairs • Water beetles

  6. POLLEN COLLECTING • tibia adaptation (corbicula) • Pollen basket

  7. KAKI BERPELEKAP (pg 26) • Tarsus of fore leg • With structure that can grasp • To hold on female beetle during mating

  8. INSECTS LARVAE(refer practical book page 37) • CAMPODEIFORM • elongated, flattened, active • Neuroptera

  9. CARABIFORM (pg 29) • flattened, well-developed legs • with no filaments on the end of the abdomen. • Carabidae (beetle)

  10. SCARABAEIFORM • sluggish, cylindrical, c-shaped • well-developed head and thoracic legs • Scarabaeidae (beetle)

  11. ELATERIFORM • Wireworm • elongate, cylindrical, with a hard exoskeleton and tiny legs • Elateridae (click beetle)

  12. ERUCIFORM • Catterpillar-like • Cylindrical, obvious head, short antennae • Butterflies and moths

  13. PLATYFORM • Very flattened larva • Leg hidden or none • Diptera (flies), Lepidoptera, Coleoptera (beetle)

  14. VERMIFORM • Maggot (berengga) • legless, head undevelop • Diptera (flies)

  15. INSECTS PUPAE (PG 38) • EXARATE (EKSARAT) • the appendages, legs etc., are free and capable of movement • Most orders except butterflies (lepidoptera) & flies (Diptera)

  16. OBTECT (OBTEK) • the legs and other appendages are closely appressed to the rest of the body • not capable of free movement • butterflies

  17. COARCTATE (KOARKTAT) • Enclosed within the last larval skin • acts as a cocoon protects the pupa • flies (Diptera, of the sub-order Cyclorrhapha.).

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