I dont f*****g know b***h but what I do know is that n****s aint sh*t
it depends on what insect it is
No, insects do not use stomata to get their oxygen. Different insects have different ways of getting their oxygen but none have to get it from a plants stomata.
The way in which insects and fish breathe differs in the process in which each receives oxygen. Insects use a tracheal system to receive oxygen and fish use their gills to filter oxygen out of the water.
No, bacteria or insects that eat plants use oxygen and the dead plants, which contain carbon, release carbon not oxygen.
Cause they breath oxygen and don't produce oxygen.
for eating insects and it gets its food from oxygen (other insects )
spiracles
yes, all insects breath oxygen in and carbon dioxide out (as do all animals)
Unlike vertebrates such as ourselves, insects do not have lungs with which to draw in air; instead they have organs called spiracles, which passively admit air into their bodies. Because insects are small, compared to vertebrates, they have a higher ratio of surface area to volume, and are therefore easier to oxygenate.
Insects are very helpful to the living world. Insects help to pollinate the flowers in the world, so that more flowers can grow and produce oxygen.
Most insects have small holes in the exoskeleton that is called the trachea. Oxygen is delivered directly to the insects tissues via the trachea.
Insects that use phototaxis are moths and cockroaches. Phototaxis means that these insects are attracted to light and will move towards it.
spiracles