Heteropteran
Characteristics, Examples, Families, Classification, & Facts
ambush bug
heteropteran, any member of the insect order Heteroptera, which comprises the so-called true bugs. (Some authorities use the name Hemiptera; others consider both the heteropterans and the homopterans to be suborders of the Hemiptera.) This large group of insects, consisting of more than 40,000 species, can be recognized by an X-shaped design on the back, which is formed by the wings at rest. A combination of features—sucking mouthparts adapted to pierce plant or animal tissues and a hardened gula (underside of the head)—separate the heteropterans from all other insect orders. Although most species of Heteroptera are terrestrial, a few are aquatic. Some species, which feed on plant juices, are serious pests of cultivated crops. Other species are predacious and benefit humans by destroying various pests. There also are heteropterans that act as carriers of disease.
Amazonian leaf-footed bug
water strider
Heteropterans can be divided into three large groups on the basis of general habitat: the water-dwelling Hydrocorisae (water boatmen, backswimmers, water scorpions, giant water bugs, and creeping water bugs); the surface-swimming and shore-dwelling Amphibicorisae (water striders, marsh and water treaders, shore bugs, and velvet water bugs); and the Geocorisae, a large group of land bugs (plant bugs, bedbugs, assassin bugs, anthocorid bugs, lace bugs, ambush bugs, stinkbugs, burrower bugs, stilt bugs, and fire bugs).
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