There are many different species of insects worldwide. They all belong to the phylum Arthropoda which is in the Animal Kingdom.
Their natural predators that prey on the insect and therefor help control the population may not exist in the new region, allowing the population to grow unchecked (except by availability of food). The same applies for plants and other types of animals, such as zebra mussels. These species often compete with the native species for food and space, causing the native species to dwindle in population. One method of controlling the invading species is to introduce the predators that naturally prey on the invading species into the environment. However, care must be taken so that we're not just compounding the problem by introducing another species that may grow unchecked and compete with the native species.
a species of mosquitos, the female of the Anopheles mosquito which carries malaria
Yes, the myan's did eat insect's
the state insect of Maine is the honeybee it became that in1975
Insect population is larger.
Mosquito belong to the insect family.
No, fruit flies and house flies are not the same type of insect. They belong to different species within the order Diptera, but they share similarities in their appearance and behavior.
The insect species that lays its eggs in a straight line is the stick insect.
There are different species of camels, but they do belong to genus Camelus.
I don't think so, butterflies are insect which means they have an exoskeleton, and exoskeleton doesn't have pores.
Kingdom Animalia
insect
The wolves belong to the dog species.
No. Insects belong to the Insecta class, and centipedes belong to the Chilopoda class.
An insect, such as a butterfly, does not belong to the chordate phylum. Insects belong to the phylum Arthropoda.
On species of insect having a body pattern, marking and behavior that is similar to another species of insect which is dangerous or poisonous to eat. This means that the mimic species is avoided by predictors which have been put off by the unpalatable species.
Yes. Six legs & wings means insect! ^^