(invertebrate zoology) An order of small or medium-sized, slender insects having incomplete metamorphosis, chewing mouthparts, short forewings, andcerci.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: Dermaptera |
(invertebrate zoology) An order of small or medium-sized, slender insects having incomplete metamorphosis, chewing mouthparts, short forewings, andcerci.
| 5min Related Video: Dermaptera (Earwigs) |
| Animal Classification: Dermaptera |
(Earwigs)
Class: Insecta
Order: Dermaptera
Number of families: 28
Evolution and systematics
The oldest-known fossils of Dermaptera comprise about 70 specimens from the Jurassic, about 208 million years ago. Earwigs are considered orthopteroid insects, closely related to Orthoptera and Phasmatodea, and they are divided into four suborders. Suborder Archidermaptera, represented by only 10 fossil species from the Jurassic, had segmented adult cerci and four to five segmented tarsi. Forficulina, with about 1,800 species in 180 genera, is the largest suborder. Adult cerci are unsegmented and forceps-like; larval cerci also are unsegmented, except in two primitive groups. Arixeniina comprise five species in two genera, and Hemimerina consist of 10 species in one genus; they are wingless and have filamentous cerci. According to some phylogenetic studies, Archidermaptera constitutes the sister group of the remaining suborders. No fossil Hemimerina and Arixeniina earwigs are known. Some authors consider Hemimerina to be a separate order.
Physical characteristics
Dermaptera are brown or black, sometimes with a light brown or yellow pattern; a few are metallic green. The head is prognathous with chewing mouthparts. The antennae are long, thin, and filiform; ocelli are lacking, and the compound eyes are well developed, except in the blind Hemimerina and almost blind Arixeniina. The thorax bears two pairs of wings, of which the first, called "tegmina," is small and leathery, giving origin to the ordinal name (derma, meaning "skin," and ptera, meaning "wings"). Tegmina are short, covering the top of only the first segments of the abdomen and leaving the posterior part of the abdomen exposed. Hemimerina, Arixeniina, and some Forficulina are secondarily wingless; in the remaining Forficulina, the second pair of wings is membranous, large, almost semicircular, and complexly folded under the tegmina at rest. The abdomen is highly movable, with pair of unsegmented, usually pincer-like cerci at the posterior end (filamentous in Hemimerina and Arixeniina). Cerci usually are dimorphic: straight in females and curved or asymmetrical in males. Forficulina earwigs are elongate and slender, reaching 0.16–3.2 in (4–78 mm) in length (including the cerci). Hemimerina are about 0.4 in (10 mm) long, excluding cerci, and they have short, stout legs and a streamlined, smooth body for rapid movement through the fur of their hosts. Arixeniina have long and slender legs. Larvae of earwigs resemble adults except for the absence of wings; larvae of wingless species often are difficult to distinguish from adults. Larval cerci are simple and almost straight, and they resemble those of the female.
Distribution
Dermaptera are cosmopolitan (except polar regions), with the greatest diversity in the tropics and subtropics.
Habitat
Forficulina earwigs frequent humid crevices of all kinds; they can be found under bark, between leaves, and under stones. Hemimerina live on the bodies of giant rats in tropical Africa and Arixeniina live on bats in the Malayan-Philippine region.
Behavior
Earwigs prefer to hide in dark crevices during the day and become active at night. Cerci are used to open the wings, for grooming, and for defense. Some earwigs have defensive glands on the second or third abdominal segment that release a foul-smelling liquid, and they can squirt this fluid up to 4 in (100 mm).
Feeding ecology and diet
Most earwigs are omnivorous, but there are some species that are predominantly herbivorous, predacious (on chinch bugs, mole crickets, mites, scales, aphids, and caterpillars), or scavengers. Hemimerina feed on scurf and fungi growing on the skin of giant rats. Arixeniina feed on the skin-gland secretions of bats and occasionally on dead insects.
Reproductive biology
Hemimerina and Arixeniina are viviparous, and Forficulina are generally oviparous. In temperate climates Forficulina adults overwinter in soil, and in spring females, sometimes assisted by males, build a brood chamber or nest in the ground, within rotting vegetation, or under a rock. After mating and laying eggs, females chase males out of the nest. Females tend their eggs, turning them around and licking them to prevent the growth of fungi until they hatch. Females then forage for food, which they feed to their young larvae. Larvae stay in the nest until the second or third instar, completing up to four or five instars in all. If larvae do not leave the burrow after one or two molts, mothers may eat them.
Conservation status
Of the more than 1,800 species of earwigs known, only one, the St. Helena earwig (Labidura herculeana) is on the IUCN Red List; it is categorized as Endangered.
Significance to humans
The name "earwig" derives from the mistaken belief that this insect enters the ear and bores into the brains of sleeping people. Thus their common name in different languages often refers to the ear (Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Russian, and Swedish) or to the forceps (Italian, Finnish, Portuguese, and Spanish). Most earwigs have little or no economic importance. They may do some damage in gardens by feeding on ornamental plants, but they also may be beneficial by eating other insects. A few species, if abundant, may damage blossoms of ornamental plants by chewing the stamens or petals.
Species accounts
Arixenia esauResources
Books:Carpenter, F. M. "Superclass Hexapoda." In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part R Arthropoda 4, edited by R. L. Kaesler. Boulder, CO: Geological Society of America, 1992.
Chopard, L. "Ordre de Dermaptères." In Traite de Zoologie. Vol. 9, edited by P. P. Grassé. Paris: Masson and Cie, 1949.
Rentz, D. C. F., and D. K. M. Kevan. "Dermaptera." In The Insects of Australia (CSIRO), edited by D. F. Waterhouse, P.B. Carne, and I. D. Naumann. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1991.
Sakai, S. Dermapterorum Catalogus Praeliminaris. 4 parts. Tokyo: Department of Biology and Chemistry, Daito Bunka University, 1970–1973.
Sakai, S. "A New Proposed Classification of the Dermaptera with Special Reference to the Check List of the Dermaptera of the World." Addition and Errata. Dermapterorum Catalogus 14 (1982): 1–108.
Periodicals:Giles, E. T. "The Comparative External Morphology and Affinities of the Dermaptera." Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 115 (1963): 95–164.
Haas, F. "The Phylogeny of the Forficulina, a Suborder of the Dermaptera." Systematic Entomology 20 (1995): 85–98.
[Article by: Natalia von Ellenrieder, PhD]
| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Dermaptera |
An order of insects commonly known as earwigs, in reference to an unfounded superstition that they crawl into the ears of sleeping persons. Earwigs are elongate and flattened, with a pair of forcepslike appendages, or cerci, at the end of the abdomen. They are 0.4–1.2 in. (10– 30 mm) long, and have chewing mouthparts, gradual metamorphosis, long legs, and shortened, leathery forewings. Some species are flightless, while others are active fliers with well-developed hindwings that fold elaborately under the forewings when the insect is at rest. Most earwigs are brown or black.
Earwigs are usually nocturnal and spend the daylight hours under bark or stones, in moist cracks and crevices, or in leaf litter at the soil surface. Most species scavenge on decaying animal or vegetable matter. A few species are predators on smaller insects. The widely introduced European earwig, Forficula auricularia, is an occasional pest of buildings, and crop plants, especially seedlings and floral crops.
Worldwide, there are about 1100 species of earwigs, and most of these species are tropical. Fossil earwigs are known from the Jurassic Period. See also Insecta.
| dermapteran | |
| earwig (insect) | |
| Insecta |
| What does an earwig do in your ear? Read answer... | |
| Do earwigs harm? Read answer... | |
| Are earwigs insects? Read answer... |
| What is an earwig's purpose? | |
| What is the habitat of a earwig? | |
| Are there pictures of earwig? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Animal Classification. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more |