Beetles
All beetles have an elytra, a hard leathery covering instead of their front wing. Grasshoppers also have an elytra along with members of that order of insects. The elytra on beetles is a different. That elytra distinguishes beetles from other orders of insects.
Insecta is merely 1 class under the phylum arthropoda. The other classes are crustacea, arachnid, chilopoda, and diplopoda. Chilopoda and Diplopoda fit beneath the subphylum myriapoda.
Cicadas are bugs that look hollow. The term bugs most correctly designates members of the Hemiptera insect order, of which the insects in question (Cicadoidea suborder) are members. Cicadas look their most hollow after they die and leave their bleached, translucent bodies on the vegetation to which they are clinging at the moment of death.
Kingdom is the largest group in this series: kingdom Phylum, class Order Family Genus Species
No. Spiders are not insects. Insects are not spiders.
Not all bugs are insects, but real bugs are the ones with 6 legs and sharp tubes for eating. Answer Taxonomically, insects comprise millions of species as a single class, Class Insecta. There about 29 orders of insects. Examples are Order Isoptera, Order Ephemeroptera, Order Odonata, Order Zeugloptera and Order Hymenoptera. The bug order was initially Order Hemiptera. This has been split into Orders Hemiptera and Homoptera. An order is a subset of Insecta. Hemiptera and Homoptera form a subset of Insecta. Thus all bugs are insects but not all insects are bugs. Bugs have all the insect characters (3 parts to the body and 6 legs and wings). They have hemelytra and piercing mouthparts however which separates them from all other insects (like termites and bees and butterflies and flies and dragonflies and beetles and lacewings and zeuglopterans et cetera).
All termites are insects in the order Isoptera.
The main insects in the order Odonata are dragonflies and damselflies.
Most insects eat plants or other insects.
Kingdom: AnimaliaAll beetles fall into the Order Coleoptera
Most insects do not exhibit learned behavior as they rely primarily on instinctual behaviors for survival. However, some social insects like ants and bees can exhibit simple forms of learned behavior through observation and communication with other members of their colony.
Kingbirds are members of the flycatcher family, and eat insects, primarily flying insects.