Monday, August 29, 2022
Critters in the Classroom: Insect Edition - Pillbugs
Friday, August 26, 2022
Common Names for Sow Bugs
Common names for woodlice vary throughout the English-speaking world. A number of common names make reference to the fact that some species of woodlice can roll up into a ball. Other names compare the woodlouse to a pig.
Common names include:
- armadillo bug
- billy baker (South Somerset)
- billy button (Dorset)
- boat-builder (Newfoundland, Canada)
- butcher boy or butchy boy (Australia, mostly around Melbourne)
- carpenter or cafner (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- carpet shrimp (Ryedale)
- charlie pig (Norfolk, England)
- cheeselog (Reading, England)
- cheesey wig
- cheesy bobs (Guildford, England)
- cheesy bug (North West Kent, Gravesend, England)
- cheesy lou (Suffolk)
- cheesy papa (Essex)
- chiggy pig (Devon, England)
- chisel pig
- chucky pig (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- chuggy pig
- crawley baker (Dorset)
- daddy grampher (North Somerset)
- damp beetle (North East England)
- doodlebug (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- fat pigs (Cork, Ireland),
- gramersow (Cornwall, England)
- granny grey (Wales)
- granny grunter (Isle of Man)
- grumper-pig (Bermuda)
- hardback (Humberside, England)
- hobbling Andrew (Oxfordshire, England)
- hobby horse (Isle of Purbeck, Dorset, England)
- hog-louse
- horton bug (Deal, Kent, England)
- humidity bug (Ontario, Canada)
- jomits (Cloneganna)
- menace (Plymouth, Devon)
- mochyn coed (tree pig), pryf lludw (ash bug), granny grey in Wales
- monkey-peas (Kent, England)
- pea bug (Medway, England)
- peasie-bug (Kent, England)
- pennysow (Pembrokeshire, Wales)
- piggy wig
- pill bug (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- potato bug
- roll up bug
- roly-poly
- saw bug (Dingwall, Nova Scotia)
- slater (Scotland, Ulster, New Zealand and Australia)
- sour bug (Cambridgeshire)
- sow bug
- water bug
- wood bug (British Columbia, Canada)
- wood-louse
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
Sow Bugs
A woodlouse (plural woodlice) is an isopod crustacean from the polyphyletic suborder Oniscidea within the order Isopoda. They get their name from often being found in old wood.
The first woodlice were marine isopods which are presumed to have colonised land in the Carboniferous, though the oldest known fossils are from the Cretaceous period. They have many common names and although often referred to as terrestrial isopods, some species live semiterrestrially or have recolonised aquatic environments. Woodlice in the families Armadillidae, Armadillidiidae, Eubelidae, Tylidae and some other genera can roll up into a roughly spherical shape (conglobate) as a defensive mechanism; others have partial rolling ability, but most cannot conglobate at all.
Woodlice have a basic morphology of a segmented, dorso-ventrally flattened body with seven pairs of jointed legs, specialised appendages for respiration and like other peracarids, females carry fertilised eggs in their marsupium, through which they provide developing embryos with water, oxygen and nutrients. The immature young hatch as mancae and receive further maternal care in some species. Juveniles then go through a series of moults before reaching maturity.
Read more, here.
Saturday, August 20, 2022
Firebrats and Silverfish Are Rocking Some Old-School Looks | Deep Look
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Reproduction and Life Cycle
Before silverfish reproduce, they carry out a ritual involving three phases, which may last over half an hour. In the first phase, the male and female stand face to face, their vibrating antennae touching, then repeatedly back off and return to this position. In the second phase, the male runs away and the female chases him. In the third phase, the male and female stand side by side and head to tail, with the male vibrating his tail against the female. Finally, the male lays a spermatophore, a sperm capsule covered in gossamer, which the female takes into her body via her ovipositor to fertilize her eggs. The female lays groups of fewer than 60 eggs at once, deposited in small crevices. The eggs are oval-shaped, whitish, about 0.8 mm (0.031 in) long, and take between two weeks and two months to hatch. A silverfish usually lays fewer than 100 eggs in her lifetime.
When the nymphs hatch, they are whitish in colour, and look like smaller adults. As they moult, young silverfish develop a greyish appearance and a metallic shine, eventually becoming adults after three months to three years. They may go through 17 to 66 moults in their lifetimes, sometimes 30 in a single year—many more than most insects. Silverfish are among the few types of insect that continue to moult after reaching adulthood.
Read more, here.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
Silverfish
The silverfish (Lepisma saccharinum) is a species of small, primitive, wingless insect in the order Zygentoma (formerly Thysanura). Its common name derives from the insect's silvery light grey colour, combined with the fish-like appearance of its movements. The scientific name (L. saccharinum) indicates that the silverfish's diet consists of carbohydrates such as sugar or starches. While the common name silverfish is used throughout the global literature to refer to various species of Zygentoma, the Entomological Society of America restricts use of the term solely for Lepisma saccharinum.
Read more, here.