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Aquatic insects

Wade, GC 1972 , 'Aquatic insects' , Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, vol. The La , pp. 87-93 , doi: https://doi.org/10.26749/rstpp.106.1.87.

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Abstract

Insects include the greatest number of species of
any class of animals. They have been divided into thirty Orders.
However only four Orders of insects consist of species whose
larval forms are always aquatic, while another nine Orders
contain some species with either aquatic larvae or which are
aquatic throughout larval and adult stages.
Insects are characteried by a hard, segmented,
exoskeleton and by a three segmented thorax, each bearing a
pair of legs and usually with two pairs of wings attached to
the second and third thoracic segments. In the Diptera and
some mayflies (Ephemeroptera) the wings are reduced to a single
pair, while in primitive insects such as springtails and silver
fish, wings are absent. They have also been lost from some
species of more advanced orders of insects.

Item Type: Article
Authors/Creators:Wade, GC
Keywords: Royal Society of Tasmania, RST, Van Diemens Land, natural history, science, ecology, taxonomy, botany, zoology, geology, geography, papers & proceedings, Australia, UTAS Library
Journal or Publication Title: Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania
ISSN: 0080-4703
DOI / ID Number: https://doi.org/10.26749/rstpp.106.1.87
Collections: Royal Society Collection > Papers & Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania
Additional Information:

Edited by M.R. Banks. - Copyright Royal Society of Tasmania

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