Info logo
Encyclopedia

  

Hymenoptera

Home :: Up
Google
www.fastload.org

Hymenoptera

Hymenoptera is one of the larger orders of insects, comprising the sawflies[?], wasps, bees, and ants. The name comes from the membranous wings (Greek hymen, a membrane), of which most forms have two pairs, the front wings larger than the back.

Females typically have a special ovipositor for inserting into hosts or otherwise inaccessible places, often modified into a stinger. The young develop through complete metamorphosis - that is, they have a worm-like larval stage and an inactive pupal stage before they mature.

Among the hymenopterans gender is determined by the number of chromosomes the individual receives. Fertilized eggs get two X chromosomes, the Y chromosomes being non-existent, and so develop into diploid females; unfertilized eggs only receive one, and so develop into haploid males. This phenomenon is called haplodiploidy[?]. The consequence is that females on average actually have more genes in common with their siblings than they do with their own offspring. Because of this, cooperation among kindred is unusually advantageous, and varying degrees of sociality have appeared several times among the different subgroups. The most extreme form is eusociality.

The wasps, bees, and ants together make up a suborder of the Hymenoptera called the Apocrita, characterized by a constriction between the first and second abdominal segments called a wasp-waist. The remaining forms (sawflies) were once classified as a second suborder, the Symphyta, but this appears to be paraphyletic. A classification of the Apocrita is as follows:


Recommend us

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license.
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia, follow this link.