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Principal researcher, Lepidoptera

Dr
Researcher, Orthoptera
& Ethno-biology

Researcher, Coleoptera

Senior Collection manager 

Collection manager

Mr Klaas Manamela 
Preparator

Mr Albert Makubung 
Preparator

Mrs Susan Mametse
Preparator

Mr Jan Legwai
Preparator

Mrs Stephina Mataboge
Preparator

Mr Peter Mothibe
Preparator

 


LINKS

Visit the site dedicated 
to the locally infamous


Entomology Links

Identification Fees

Collecting Permits

 


 
Transvaal Museum index

 

 

 

Department of Invertebrates
Transvaal Museum - South Africa

The Department of Invertebrates is responsible for research and curation of all invertebrate collections at the museum. The Department consists of Arachnida, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, Odonata, Orthoptera and Neuroptera collections. 

 


Visit the Big 12 African Insects page - click
Collecting and Preserving Insects: an online manual - click
Collecting & Preserving Insects (Manual for sale at Museum)
New Insect Order found in Namibia click
Southern African Invertebrates Specialist Group (SAISG) Newsletter click
Ethno-Biology at the Museum click

Africa Big 5 & Little 5 click
Meet SA's longest stick insect  


There is no general agreement on the details of how different groups of insects are related. 

Phylum Annelida (Segmented Worms)

Phylum Nematode (Round worms)

Phylum Onychophora (Velvet Worms) click

Phylum Arthropoda (Insects, centipedes, millipedes, crustaceans, arachnids) - All arthropods have an exoskeleton that covers a body divided into segments, and all have jointed legs.
World Wide: 17 Classes, 99 Orders, 2 140 Families

  • Class Arachnida (Spiders and Scorpions) click
  • Class Diplopoda (Centipedes and Millipedes)
  • Class Insecta
    • Order Archaeognatha (Bristletails)
    • Order Thysanura (Silverfish)
    • Order Ephemeroptera (Mayflies)
    • Order Odonata  
                Suborder Zygoptera (Damselflies)
                Suborder Anisoptera (Dragonflies)
    • Order Blattodea (cockroaches)
    • Order Isoptera (termites)
    • Order  Mantodea (Mantids)
    • Order Dermaptera (Earwigs)
    • Order Hemimerina
    • Order Embiidina
    • Order Plecoptera (Stoneflies)
    • Order Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, katydids)
    • Order Phasmatodea (stick and leaf insects)
                Family Phasmatidae (stick insects)
    • Order Psocoptera
    • Order Phthiraptera
                        Suborder Heteroptera (true bugs)
                        Suborder Homoptera (cicadas, aphids, scale insects)
    • Order Thysanoptera
    • Order Megaloptera
    • Order Neuroptera (lacewings, ant lions, dobsonflies, etc.)
    • Order Coleoptera (beetles)
    • Order Mecoptera (scorpion flies)
    • Order Diptera (flies)
                Suborder Nematocera
                Suborder Brachycera
                Suborder Cyclorrhapha
    • Order Siphonaptera (fleas)
    • Order Trichoptera (caddisflies)
    • Order Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies)
    • Order Hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps)
                Suborder Symphyta
                Suborder Apocrita

With around one million named species and perhaps several times that number unnamed, insects account for a great majority of the species of animals on earth. They are a tremendously successful group. Insects can be found in almost all terrestrial and freshwater habitats, from the driest deserts to freshwater ponds, from the canopy of a tropical rainforest (where their diversity is unbelievably great) to the arctic wastes. A few species are even marine. Their feeding habits are similarly varied; almost any substance that has nutritive value is eaten by some group of insects.

Insects also show huge variety in shape and form. Almost the only condition their group does not attain is very large body size. A number of features, however, are shared by most kinds of living insects. In addition to the general characteristics of uniramians, these include a body composed of three tagmata, a head, thorax, and abodmen; a pair of relatively large compound eyes and usually three ocelli located on the head; a pair of antennae, also on the head; mouthparts consisting of a labrum, a pair of mandibles, a pair of maxillae, a labium, and a tonguelike hypopharynx; two pairs of wings, derived from outgrowths of the body wall (unlike any vertebrate wings); and three pairs of walking legs.

Insects have a complete and complex digestive tract. Their mouthparts are especially variable, often complexly related to their feeding habits. Insects "breathe" through a tracheal system, with external openings called spiracles and increasingly finely branched tubules that carry gases right to the metabolizing tissues. Aquatic forms may exchange gases through the body wall or they may have various kinds of gills. Excretion of nitrogenous waste takes place through Malpighian tubules. The nervous system of insects is complex, including a number of ganglia and a ventral, double nerve cord. The ganglia are largely independent in their functioning; for example, an isolated thorax is capable of walking. Yet ganglia also use sensory output. A grasshopper with one wing removed can correct for this loss and maintain flight, using sensory input from its brain. Sense organs are complex and acute. In addition to ocelli and compound eyes, some insects are quite sensitive to sounds, and their chemoreceptive abilities are astounding.

 

Insects are dioecious and fertilization is internal in most. The ways in which mating is accomplished, however, are incredibly variable; study of this variability by evolutionary biologists has greatly advanced our understanding of the evolution of behavior, social evolution, and traits such as number, size of young and patterns of investment in them. Reproduction by insects often involves a male locating a receptive female through chemicals (pheromones) released by the female. In most species, females store the sperm in a special receptacle in their abdomens; even species that lay huge numbers of eggs (in honeybees, for example, the number may be over one million), females mate only once and rely on sperm stored during that mating for the rest of their lives.

The manner in which growth is accomplished is an especially important characteristic of insects. In some, hatching eggs produce miniature adults, which to grow must shed their exoskeleton in a process called ecdyisis. In almost 90% of insect species, however, newly hatched young are completely different in appearance from adults. These larval forms usually live in different habitats, eat different foods, and assume a body form completely different from that of their parents. The larva feeds and grows, molting its skin periodically. At some point larval growth is completed, the larva stops feeding and builds a case or cocoon around itself. In this nonfeeding condition it is called a pupa or chrysalis. While so encased, the larva undergoes a complete transformation or "metamorphosis" of its body form, and a fully-formed adult emerges. Insects that experience this sort of complete change are called "holometabolous." Other species undergo a more gradual process, in which the newly hatched young are more similar to the adult but are small in size, lack wings, are sexually immature, and may differ in other, relatively minor ways as well. The young in these insects are called nymphs, and the lifestyle is referred to as "hemimetabolous."

Insects are incalculably valuable to man. Usually, we think of them in a negative context. Insects eat our food, feed on our blood and skin, contaminate our dwellings, and transmit horrible diseases. But without them, we could not exist. They are a fundamental part of our ecosystem. A brief and incomplete list of their positive roles would include the pollination of many, perhaps most higher plants; the decomposition of organic materials, facilitating the recycling of carbon, nitrogen, and other essential nutrients; the control of populations of harmful invertebrate species (including other insects); the direct production of certain foods (honey, for example); and the manufacture of useful products such as silk and shellac. Ethno-biology