Insects - Flypoint
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Transcript Insects - Flypoint
INSECTS
Relevant in food hygiene
An overview
General Characteristics
Most specious-rich class in the animal
kingdom
1 Mio. insects described (realistic: between 1
Mio. and 80 Mio.)
Central Europe: 40,000 insect species
Polymorphic class:
Size: a few tenth of a millimetre up to 30 cm wing
span
With wings or wingless
Unobtrusive colouring to striking patterns
Body Plan
Pronounced segmentation
Head (Caput)
Thorax
Abdomen
Exoskeleton made of chitin
Body surface is water and gas
impermeable; prevents dehydration and
protects from mechanical and chemical
impacts
Life Cycle
Metamorphosis
Imperfect
Complete
Oviposition
Larvae
Imago
(Adult)
Puppae
Insect Diet
Herbivore / Phytophagous insects
E.g.: butterflies, sawflies, bees...
Wood eater / Xylophagous insects
E.g.: bark beetle, wood drill, termites, horntail
Gall makers / Cecidozoa
E.g.: gall wasp, gall mite, weevil...
Insect Diet
Feeding on dung / Coprophagic insects
E.g.: dung beetle, dung fly...
Predator / Entomophagous insects
E.g.: dragonfly, bug...
Parasites
E.g.: mosquitos, bed bugs, fleas, lice
Transmission of pathogens
Humans & Insects
Insects since approx. 500 million years
Colonisation of a variety of habitats
Humans since approx. 2 million years
Useful insects: honey bee, silk moth...
Transmission of pathogens
Adaptation of insects to the human lifestyle
Food stuff, commodities & garbage
Transmission of Pathogens
Virus
Yellow fever via mosquitos
Dengue fever via mosquitos
Bacteria
Dysentery via flies
Typhus via lice and fleas
Pest via fleas
Plasmodia
Malaria via Anopheles mosquitos
Flagellates
Sleeping sickness via tsetse fly
Housefly – Musca domestica
Attracted by food and
waste smells
Transmission of pathogens for
cholera and amoebic
dysentery
World occurance
Oviposition in manure and
garbage
One fly lies 500 eggs in 3
weeks
Sighting (pink):
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Fruit Flies - Drosophilidae
Tiny flies (1-6 mm)
Attracted by putrescent smells,
left-overs
More than 3000 species worldwide
Most famous: Drosophila
melanogaster – Model organism of
geneticists
Stable Fly – Stomoxys calcitrans
Similar to housefly, but with forward-facing
proboscis
World occurrence; close to stables
Food: Males & females suck blood of warmblooded animals
Oviposition in dung
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Grey Flesh Fly – Sarcophaga carnaria
Occurrence in entire Europe;
houses close to food stuff
Attracted by smell of raw meet
Oviposition on raw meet
Transmission of bacteria, fungi,
viruses
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Blue Meat Fly – Calliphora vicina
World occurrence
Can smell fresh cadaver
over distance of 10 km
(forensic entomology)
Oviposition on cadaver
and open wounds
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Pale giant Horse Fly – Tabanus bovinus
Very large (20-25 mm), dipterous fly with
large green striped and iridescent
compound eyes
Occurrence: Europe to Southern
Scandinavia, Middle East and Northern
Africa; always close to waters
Food: Females suck blood of warmblooded animals (cattle); males visit flowers
Horse-fly bites are painful
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Mosquito – Culex pipiens
Size: 6-7 mm
Occurrence: worldwide, close to fresh water,
brackwater, in swamps or meadows
Food: Females are dependent on blood of warmblooded animals
Reproduction: Oviposition in spring in waters
The malaria mosquito (Anopheles) appears
increasingly in Europe
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Asian Tiger Mosquito – Stegomyia albopicta
Originally home to
southern and south-east
tropics
Since the 1990s
spreading in Europe
(globalisation, climate
change)
Transmission of
Chikungunya- and
Dengue fever
Striking patterning
Wasp – Vespula vulgaris
Wasps are attracted by sugary syrups and
feed on fruits and sweets
All wasps contain a poison sting
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Hornet – Vespa crabro
Occurrence from Europe to Asia
Size: 18-35 mm
Less obtrusive and harmful than wasps
Sting is painful but not more serious than
that of a wasp
Hornets prey on insects and small animals
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Insect Poison Allergy
Allergic reaction
to insect poisons
Sting by wasps,
honeybees; also
hornets and
humble bees
Potentially lethal
References
http://www.insektenbox.de/index.html
GU Naturführer Insekten & Schmetterlinge
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asiatische_Tige
rm%C3%BCcke