INSECT TERMS/GLOSSARY
The list of terms below are from the
following web site:
http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/glossary.html
Abdomen: The last of the three major body divisions of an insect.
Action threshold: The pest density at which a control tactic
must be implemented to avoid an economic loss.
Active ingredient (AI): The component of a pesticide formulation
responsible for the toxic effect.
Agroecosystem: A relatively artificial ecosystem in an agricultural
field, pasture, or orchard.
Antenna, Antennae (pl.): A pair of sensory organs located on
the head of an insect, above the mouthparts.
Aorta: The front-most, non-pulsating portion of the dorsal blood
vessel of an insect.
Arthropod: Any of the invertebrate animals (such as insects,
spiders, or crustaceans) having an exoskeleton, a segmented body and
jointed limbs.
Augmentation: Biological control practices intended to increase
the number or effectiveness of existing natural enemies.
Bacterium: A single-celled microscopic plant-like organism
that does not produce chlorophyll.
Beak: Colloquial expression for the protruding mouthpart structures
of a sucking insect (= proboscis).
Biological control: The use of living organisms, such as predators,
parasitoids, and pathogens, to control pest insects, weeds, or diseases.
Typically involves some human activity.
Biorational: Having a minimal disruptive influence upon the
environment and its inhabitants (e.g., a biorational insecticide). Broad-spectrum
(insecticide): Active against a wide range of insects.
Bt: The bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis.
Caterpillar: The immature stage (larva) of a butterfly, moth,
or sawfly.
Chemical control:Pest management practices which rely upon the
application of synthetic or naturally-derived pesticides.
Class: A category of the classification scheme of living organisms
ranking below a phylum and above an order (e.g., Insecta).
Classical biological control: The importation of foreign natural
enemies to control previously introduced, or native, pests.
Cocoon: A silken case formed by an insect larva for pupation.
Cole crops: Crops such as cabbage, broccoli, Brussels sprouts,
and other crucifers.
Complete metamorphosis: Type of insect development characterized
by four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult.
Conservation: Any biological control practice designed to protect
and maintain populations of existing natural enemies.
Contact poison: A pesticide that is absorbed through the body
wall, as opposed to one that must be ingested.
Cucurbits: Vine crops such as cucumbers, melons, squash, and
pumpkins.
Cultural control: Pest management practices that rely upon manipulation
of the cropping environment (e.g., cultivation of weeds harboring insect
pests).
Density (insect populations): The number of insects per unit
of measure (e.g., beetles per square meter).
Diapause: A physiological state of arrested metabolism, growth,
and development that occurs at a particular stage in the life cycle
of an organism.
Dormancy: A recurring period in the life cycle of an organism
when growth, development, and reproduction are suppressed.
Ecology: The study of an organism's interrelationship with its
environment.
Economic threshold: see Action threshold.
Elytra: The thickened or leathery front or forewings of insects
such as beetles.
Encapsulation: The surrounding of an invading body, such as
the egg of a parasite, by insect hemocytes (blood cells) and the formation
of a protective capsule.
Entomopathogenic: Insect-attacking organism.
Environmental impact quotient (EIQ): A relative value that estimates
the environmental impact of a pesticide, by taking into account toxicity
to natural enemies, wildlife, and humans, degree of exposure, aquatic
and terrestrial effects, soil chemistry, etc.
Epizootic: A disease outbreak within an insect population.
Exoskeleton: A skeleton or supportive structure on the outside
of an insect body.
Exotic: Introduced from another country or continent (e.g.,
introduced insect pest).
Family: A taxonomic subdivision of an order, containing a group
of related genera. Family names end in -idae.
Forewing: The first or anterior pair of insect wings.
Fumigant: A substance which produces a gas, vapor, fume, or
smoke intended to kill a pest.
Fungicide: Any substance that kills or inhibits the growth of
a fungus.
Funicle: The portion of the flagellum of the antenna closest
to the club.
Fungus, Fungi
(pl.): Any of numerous plants lacking chlorophyll,
ranging in form from a single cell to a body of branched filaments.
Includes the yeasts, molds, smuts, and mushrooms.
Gene: A biochemical unit of hereditary, often coding for an
entire protein.
Generalist: A pest or natural enemy that can utilize a wide
range of species as host or prey.
Generation: Period from any given stage in the life cycle to
the same life stage in the offspring. Typically from egg to egg.
Genetic engineering: The manipulation of the genetic material
of an organism in order to achieve desirable characteristics.
Genus, Genera (pl.): A group of evolutionarily related species,
sharing one or a number of characteristics.
Gradual metamorphosis: A type of insect development in which
there is no prolonged resting stage (pupa). The three stages are: egg,
nymph, and adult.
GV: Granulosis virus.
Habitat manipulation: Manipulation of agricultural areas and
surrounding environment with the aim of conserving or augmenting populations
of natural enemies (e.g., the planting of a refuge for natural enemies).
Head: The anterior region of an insect, which bears the mouthparts,
eyes, antennae and houses the brain.
Herbicide: A substance used to kill or control weeds.
Hermaphroditic: Having both male and female sex organs in one
individual.
Hindwings: The second pair of wings of an insect.
Honeydew: The sugary liquid discharge from the anus of certain
insects (Homoptera) such as aphids and scales.
Host: The organism in or on which a parasitoid lives; a plant
on which an insect feeds.
Host plant resistance: The relative amount of heritable qualities
possessed by a plant that reduces the degree of damage to the plant
by a pest or pests.
Hyperparasite: A parasite whose host is another parasite.
Indigenous: Native to an area.
Inoculative release: The release of relatively small numbers
of natural enemies that are expected to colonize, reproduce, and spread
naturally throughout an area.
Insect growth regulator (IGR): A substance, natural or synthetic,
that controls or modifies insect growth processes.
Insecticide resistance: Genetically inherited ability to withstand
doses of pesticide which would kill individuals from strains whose ancestors
had not been exposed to the pesticide.
Insect resistant (plants): Tolerant of, or resistant to, insect
attack (as in plants). individuals from strains whose ancestors had
not been exposed to the pesticide.
Instar: The stage of an insect's life between successive molts,
for example the first instar is between hatching from the egg and the
first molt.
Integrated pest management (IPM): An approach to the management
of pests in which all available control options, including physical,
chemical, and biological controls, are evaluated and integrated into
a unified program.
Integument: The outer covering of the insect body that includes
the cuticle and the epidermis.
Introduction (classical biological control): The importation
of a natural enemy from a foreign country or continent, usually to control
a pest also of foreign origin.
Inundative release: The release of relatively large numbers
of natural enemies to suppress pest populations, without the expectation
that the natural enemies will colonize and spread throughout the area.
Larva, Larvae
(pl.): The immature stage between the egg and
pupa of insects having complete metamorphosis where the immature differs
radically from the adult (e.g., caterpillars, grubs).
Leafy greens: Lettuces and other leaf vegetables.
Least toxic:
Having a minimal toxic effect upon non-target
organisms.
Life Cycle: The sequence of events that occurs during the lifetime
of an individual organism.
Maggot: The immature form (larva) of a fly or wasp, lacking
legs and a well-developed head.
Mass-reared: Produced in large numbers, as in natural enemies
produced for release programs.
Mechanical control: Control of pests by physical means such
as the use of screens or row covers.
Metabolism, Metabolic: Chemical changes that occur in living
cells to provide energy for vital activities and to assimilate new material.
Metamorphosis: A change in body form during development of an
insect.
Microbial: A microscopic organism; a germ.
Microbial insecticide: A preparation of microorganisms (e.g.,
viruses or bacteria) or their products used to suppress insect pest
populations.
Microsporidia: Single-celled life forms, related to Protozoa.
Mite: Any of several minute invertebrates belonging to the phylum
Arthropoda, class Arachnida.
Morphology: Form or structure of an organism.
Multivoltine: Having more than one brood or generation per season.
Mycelium, Mycelia (pl.): A mass of interwoven filamentous 'threads'
that make up the vegetative part of a fungus.
Native (insect or plant): Of local origin, not intentionally
or accidentally introduced.
Natural control: The suppression of pest populations by naturally
occurring biological and environmental agents.
Natural enemies: Living organisms found in nature that kill,
weaken, or reduce the reproductive potential of other organisms.
Nectar: The sugary liquid secreted by many flowers.
Nematode: An elongated, cylindrical worm parasitic in animals,
insects, or plants, or free-living in soil or water.
NPV: Nuclear polyhedrosis virus.
Nymph: The immature stage, following hatching from the egg,
of an insect that does not have a pupal stage.
Ocelli: Simple eyes on some adult and larval insects. Typically
there are three, which form an inverted triangle dorsally, the function
of which is obscure.
Order: A taxonomic subdivision that contains groups of related
families or superfamilies; usually ending in -ptera in insects.
Overwinter: A period of rest or hibernation by which insects
survive the winter.
Oviposition: The laying or depositing of eggs.
Ovipositor: The egg-laying apparatus of a female insect.
Palp (palpus): Sensory organ attached to insect mouthparts that
is used to test the quality of food.
Parasite: An organism that lives in or on another organism (the
host) during some portion of its life cycle.
Parasitoid: An animal that feeds in or on another living animal,
consuming all or most of its tissues and eventually killing it.
Parthenogenesis: Development of an insect, from egg to adult,
without fertilization.
Pathogen: A disease-causing organism.
Pest: An organism that interferes with human activities, property,
or health, or is objectionable.
Pest management: see Integrated pest management.
Pesticide: A substance that is used to kill, debilitate, or
repel a pest.
Pest-resistant crops: Crops that possess attributes which minimize
damage by pests.
Phenology: The seasonal life history of an insect population.
Pheromone: A substance, such as a sex attractant, that is given
off by one individual and causes a specific reaction in other individuals
of the same species.
Phylum, Phyla (pl.): One of the major divisions of the animal
kingdom.
Physical Control: Control of pests by physical means such as
heat, cold, sound waves, etc.
Polyembryonic
(eggs): A single egg that divides to form two
or more (often hundreds) identical embryos.
Polyembryony: Having several embryos.
Population: A group of individuals of the same species within
a given space and time.
Predaceous: Preying upon other organisms, predatory.
Predator: An animal that attacks and feeds on other animals,
normally killing several individuals during its life cycle.
Pronotum: The upper, often shield-like, hardened body-wall plate,
located just behind the head of an insect.
Protozoan: A microscopic, single-celled organism that is largely
aquatic and includes many parasitic forms.
Pupa, Pupae (pl.): The nonfeeding stage between the larva and
adult in insects with complete metamorphosis.
Puparium, Puparia (pl.): A case formed by the hardening of the
last larval skin, in which the pupa is formed; usually of flies.
Pupate: To transform to a pupa.
Resistance (insecticide or pesticide): see Insecticide resistance.
Resistance (plant): see Host plant resistance.
Resurgence (pest): The development of large populations of pests
that had previously been suppressed.
Sampling: Estimating the density of organisms (pests or natural
enemies) or damage by examining a defined portion of the crop.
Scouting, Scout: see Sampling.
Septicemia: Blood poisoning caused by pathogenic organisms.
Specialist: A pest or natural enemy that utilizes a narrow range
of species for its host or prey.
Species:
A group of individuals similar in structure and capable
of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring. They are different
in structure from other such groups and do not interbreed with them.
Spiracles: The external openings of the insect breathing (tracheal)
system, found along the abdomen.
Spore: A reproductive structure developing in certain bacteria
and fungi which is strongly resistant to environmental influences but
which will become active under suitable conditions.
Stage (life stage): A distinct period in the development of
an organism (e.g., for some insects, egg, larval, pupal, and adult stages).
Stomach poison: An insecticide that is lethal only after it
has been ingested by an insect, entering the insect body through the
gut.
Systemic insecticide: An insecticide that is absorbed into plant
sap and is lethal to insects feeding on or within the treated plant.
Thorax: The insect body region behind the head which bears the
legs and wings.
Tolerance (host-plant resistance): The ability of a plant to
withstand injury by pests.
Transformed (Bt-transformed): Transfer and expression of a gene
(e.g., for Bt toxin) into another organism.
Trap crop: A small area of a crop used to divert pests from
a larger area of the same or another crop. The pests, once diverted
to the trap crop, may be treated with an insecticide.
Univoltine: Having only one brood or generation per season.
Vector: An organism capable of carrying and transmitting a disease-causing
agent from one host to another.
Virus: Any of various submicroscopic pathogens which can only
replicate inside a living cell.
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