entomologist
One who studies insects is an Entomologist.
Insects actually have more than one specie. Insects are a life group. For example, a specie would be predator insects, which is one specie. Insects actually have more than one specie. Insects are a life group. For example, a specie would be predator insects, which is one specie. THERE ARE 19,000 DIFFERENT SPECIES
The scientific field is called entomology.
There are nearly one million known species of insects and as many as an estimated 10 million undescribed ones.
This is when one animal will evolve into two different species. Many animals and insects will do this in certain areas.
An entomologist studies insects and spiders. An arachnologist studies spiders specifically.
The insects, of which about one million species are known. This is about half of the total number of species known.
Niche partitioning is when two different species use the same resource without competing. For example fish feeding at different depths in a lake, or monkeys feeding at different levels in the trees. One species of spiny mouse eats insects during the day, another species feeds on the same kind of insects at night. Perhaps the fish feeding in a freshwater lake is an example of a freshwater niche.
Releasing pheromones is one of the ways animals and insects communicate with the other members of their species non-verbally. Pheromones influence the development or behavior of the other members of a similar species.
No one actually knows the answer. New species of animals (mostly insects) are being discovered every day, and lot's of species go extinct eventually. It would be nearly impossible for anyone to know how many different kinds of mammals, fish, insects, birds, and other animals on Earth.
Mr. Jack Stapleton was an entomologist, translation, one who studies insects.
They're not really ! Snakes don't eat insects (apart from one species that eats termites) and insects don't do anything special for snakes.