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Endopterygota

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: Endopterygota
(¦en·dō′ter·ə′gäd·ə)

(invertebrate zoology) A division of the insects in the subclass Pterygota, including those orders which undergo a holometabolous metamorphosis.


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Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Endopterygota
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A division (also known as Holometabola) of the subclass Pterygota, including those insects that undergo complete metamorphosis during their life cycle. That is, individual development goes through four distinct stages: egg, larva (trophic), pupa (reconstructive), and adult (reproductive). The larval and adult stages often live in very different adaptive zones and have very different life forms, necessitating a quiescent pupal stage in which extensive restructuring takes place. Internalization of the developing wings and the advent of the pupa combine to form a key general adaptation that breaks the constraining linkage between trophic and reproductive life forms, allowing each to evolve for its own special function. This adaptation probably accounts for the rapid rise of the Endopterygota to a dominant position among the insects from the Permian to the present.

The division Endopterygota comprises a large majority of all insects, distributed in the orders Coleoptera, Neuroptera, Strepsiptera, Mecoptera, Siphonaptera, Trichoptera, Lepidoptera, Diptera, and Hymenoptera. It is thought to be monophyletic. See also Exopterygota; Insecta; Pterygota.


Wikipedia: Endopterygota
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Endopterygota
Fossil range: 318–0 Ma
Middle Carboniferous - Recent
Panorpa communis, a scorpionfly (order Mecoptera)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Class: Insecta
Subclass: Pterygota
Infraclass: Neoptera
Superorder: Endopterygota
Sharp, 1898
Orders

Hymenoptera (ants, bees, etc.)
Coleoptera (beetles)
Strepsiptera (twisted-winged parasites)
Raphidioptera (snakeflies)
Megaloptera (alderflies, etc.)
Neuroptera (net-veined insects)
Mecoptera (scorpionflies, etc.)
Siphonaptera (fleas)
Diptera (true flies)
Trichoptera (caddisflies)
Lepidoptera (butterflies, moths)
For fossil groups and possible future splits, see text.

The Endopterygota, also known as Holometabola, are insects of the subclass Pterygota which go through distinctive larval, pupal, and adult stages. They undergo a radical metamorphosis, with the larval and adult stages differing considerably in their structure and behaviour. This is called holometabolism, or complete metamorphism.

The Endopterygota are among the most diverse insect superorders, with at least 680,000 living species divided between eleven orders, containing insects such as butterflies, fleas, bees, ants and beetles.

They are distinguished from the Exopterygota (or Hemipterodea) by the way in which their wings develop. Endopterygota (meaning literally "internal winged forms") develop wings inside the body and undergo an elaborate metamorphosis involving a pupal stage. Exopterygota ("external winged forms") develop wings on the outside of their bodies and do not go through a pupal stage. The latter trait is plesiomorphic however and not exclusively found in the exopterygotes, but also in groups such as Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) which are not Neoptera but more basal among insects.

Systematics

ITIS considers any subdivision of the Neoptera beyond the orders invalid, but this is almost universally rejected.

The Endopterygota are sometimes divided into three assemblages: Neuropteroida (Neuroptera, Megaloptera, Raphidioptera and Coleoptera), Hymenopteroida (Hymenoptera), and Panorpoida (Siphonaptera, Diptera, Trichoptera, Lepidoptera, Strepsiptera and Mecoptera). It was long believed that the hymenopterans, with their highly-developed social systems, constituted the most advanced insects, despite their rather "primitive" anatomy compared to flies and beetles for example.

More recently, this has increasingly been rejected and DNA sequence data seems to verify that the hymenopterans are indeed among the most basal endopterygotes, whereas flies and fleas are often considered the most radically advanced insects. This calls the previous subdivision into question, and consequently several new taxa have been proposed, splitting up the Endopterygota. While some groups (such as the "sucking-stinging" fly-flea assemblage or the caddisfly-butterfly group) seem indeed to be good clades, it is not likely that the relationships of the endopterygotes, or the neopteran insects in general, will be resolved in detail soon.

Superorder Endopterygota sensu stricto

Proposed superorder Neuropterida/Neuropteroidea

Proposed superorder Mecopteroidea/Antliophora

Proposed superorder Amphiesmenoptera

Incertae sedis

See also

References

  • Beutel, R. G., et al. (2006): Endopterygote systematics - where do we stand and what is the goal (Hexapoda, Arthropoda)? Systematic Entomology. 31(2): 202-219.
  • Nel, A., et al. (2007): The earliest holometabolous insect from the Carboniferous: a "crucial" innovation with delayed success (Insecta Protomeropina Protomeropidae) Annales de la Societe Entomologique de France. 43(3): 349-355.

 
 
Learn More
Pterygota (arthropoda)
Neuroptera (arthropoda)
Exopterygota (arthropoda)

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