Form and function

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Also known as: Hemiptera, Heteroptera, bug, true bug

General features

Heteropterans have features typical of all insects and special adaptations that differentiate them from other insect groups. The head tests new environments through light perceptions by compound eyes and simple eyes (ocelli) and through both scent and sound perceptions by the antennae. The mouthparts are located conveniently for quick exploitation of newly discovered food sources. The thorax bears support and transportation mechanisms, legs, and wings. An important function for the third body region, the abdomen, is reproduction. Sutures divide the body surface into sclerites (hard plates), which may be fused or separated by flexible membranes. Hairs, scales, or a variety of glandular secretions may adorn at least some areas of the body. The body surface may be raised into spines of a variety of shapes, knobs, or tubercles; tubercles often are setigerous—i.e., glandular with a straight or curved filament or bristle at the tip. Some of these projecting structures, which have bases associated with specialized cells, probably have a sensory function and respond to vibrations of air, substrate, or touch. Certain long hairs, each arising from a ringed socket, are called trichobothria, and their presence and arrangement on various parts of the body have taxonomic significance.

Distinguishing features

The covering of the head is a sclerotized ring tapering from the flexible neck forward or downward and ending in three lobes: a jugum on each side and a central clypeus (or tylus). The area above and between the eyes (called the vertex) may bear a transverse pair of simple eyes (a median one is never present in Heteroptera). The hard lower surface of the head is called the gula (hypostomal bridge).

Mouthparts

The piercing–sucking mouthparts are composed of a troughlike, four-segmented labium in which lie four stylets; these are modified mandibles and maxillae. Each of the hairlike maxillae has two major grooves plus minor grooves and ridges along its median surface. When brought together and locked by the minor grooves and ridges, the two major grooves form the left and right halves of two separate tubular canals that extend the length of the maxillae. The anterior canal is the food tube through which fluids are drawn by a sucking pump (described below); the posterior tube is the salivary canal through which digestive and certain other fluids may pass into a food source. These fluids stun or kill the prey, prevent coagulation of blood, and initiate the process of digestion. Along the sides of the maxillary stylets are slender mandibles with serrated tips. The mandibles and maxillae alternately advance into the food tissue until the appropriate fluid is reached by the maxillae, which is when ingestion begins. Since the labium does not penetrate the food tissue, the stylets must extend beyond the protection of the labial groove. This extension may be accomplished in one of two ways. The labium may be shortened by jackknifing some of its segments, leaving only the apical and sometimes the basal segments to guide the exposed stylets. In some species the extensible stylets are much longer than the labium. When not extended, the stylets either are coiled or looped in a chamber located in the labium or the head or are found in a long sheath that extends backward into the heteropteran’s body cavity.

The sucking pump is a chamber whose front wall is folded lengthwise into the mouth cavity. Contraction of certain muscles increases the size of the cavity, decreases the pressure in it, and allows the liquids to flow through the food canal into the pump. When the muscles relax, the size of the chamber decreases gradually and pushes the food toward the true mouth, which opens into the esophagus.

Thoracic features

Each of the three somites of the thorax bears a pair of legs, and both the meso- and metathorax bear a pair of wings. The large conspicuous part of the thorax between the head and the wings is called the pronotum (i.e., the expanded top part of the prothorax). Projecting from beneath the hind margin of the pronotum is the triangular, sometimes U-shaped, scutellum. Along the side margins of the scutellum may be a groove or fold (the frenum). In repose, the inner edges of the front wings hook onto the frenum. On each side of the metathorax may be a pore (ostiole) that provides an outlet for a highly volatile, repellent fluid secreted by internal scent glands. The ostiole may be surrounded by an elevated ridge (peritreme), and then by an extensive, roughened, evaporative area.

Legs

The legs may be modified in various ways to serve specific functions. Legs may be lengthened or expanded to aid in camouflage. Sometimes the hind femurs and their accompanying leg muscles are adapted for jumping. The middle and hind legs may be flattened for swimming, or their effective width increased by a marginal fringe of long hairs that spread during a power stroke and flatten against the leg on the recovery stroke. The front legs, when specialized for grasping prey, have tibia and tarsus adapted to fold tightly against a thickened femur. Stout hairs or spines along one or both of the opposing surfaces of this grasping leg prevent a victim from slipping free. The males of many species have hind legs that are thickened or spined to hold females during mating. Lacking mandibulate mouthparts with which to clean their antennae, many Heteroptera have a comblike series of hairs on the end of the front tibia, across which the antennae may be dragged. Certain genera (Nabidae, Reduviidae) that live suspended slothlike from the underside of spider webs have long, foldable claws.