Moth
The crop of an animal or insect comes between the mouth and stomach and allows them to store food.
Imago
because they are laying eggs.
If you have eaten an insect, for example, a fly, your best bet is to swallow a spider to catch the fly, don't ask me why.
The thorax carries the stomach, legs, and wings. Mainly helps for digestion. It is like the human stomach
Insects have a segmented body structure consisting of three main parts: the head, thorax, and abdomen. The heart, which is part of the insect's circulatory system, is located in the abdomen, specifically along the dorsal side. The stomach, or midgut, is also found in the abdomen, where it plays a crucial role in digestion. Thus, both the heart and stomach are contained within the abdominal segment of an insect.
Most insects have a dorsal tube that is divided into different chambers. This is what serves as the heart in an insect. The dorsal tube is located toward the thorax which is in the midsection of the insect.
A bloodmeal is the stomach contents of a bloodsucking insect, or a fertilizer made from dried blood and rich in nitrogen.
Nothing. They will digest in you stomach, and come out as feaces.
Insects have body parts just like humans do. The thorax of an insect is like the chest. On the thorax are the insect's head, legs, wings, leading to its abdomen. The abdomen is the stomach, and it also contains the insect's genitals (like humans, insects can be male or female).
Absolutely not. IF you were to somehow accidentally swallow a spider or insect of any type, your digestive acids in the stomach would quickly kill it.
a frog captures an insect with its long tongue and uses its hands like toddlers and swallows its prey down their long esophagus and then the stomach does the rest.