Wingless insect

A wingless insect is an insect that does not have wings.

Many groups of insects do not have wings, so wingless subgroups are unremarkable. Apterygota are a subclass of small, agile insects, distinguished from other insects by their lack of wings in the present and in their evolutionary history. They include Thysanura (silverfish and firebrats). Some species lacking wings are members of insect orders that generally do have wings. Some do not grow wings at all, having "lost" the possibility in the remote past. Some have reduced wings that are not useful for flying. Some develop wings but shed them after they are no longer useful.

Wingless flies

True flies are insects of the order Diptera. The name is derived from the Greek di- = two, and ptera = wings. Most insects of this order have two wings (not counting the halteres, club-like limbs which are homologous to the second pair of wings found on insects of other orders). Wingless flies are found on some islands and other isolated places. Some are parasites, resembling ticks.

Wingless flies

Fly species that shed wings

Wingless mutant flies

Wingless moths

There are many species of wingless moths. Often only the females are wingless (larviform females).

Moth species having wingless females

Many more

Flightless moths

Wingless wasps

Wasp species having wingless females

  • Family Mutillidae, with more than 3,000 species
  • Diamma bicolor, the blue ant (a wasp)

Others

  • Family Eumastacidae, grasshoppers having many wingless species
  • Family Myrmecophilidae, ant crickets
  • Thinopinus pictus, the pictured rove beetle
  • Order Siphonaptera, fleas, believed to have had winged ancestors
  • Order Phthiraptera, lice, a wingless order under the winged superorder Exopterygota
  • Family Trichogrammatidae, parasitic wasps, some species of which have wingless males that mate and die inside the host egg
gollark: Cave right now: Incredibly dull.
gollark: Flip?
gollark: Lots of SAltkins around recently, you know.
gollark: W h y , T J 0 8 / 9 ?
gollark: I mean, you can have some for free, don't really want/need their offspring.

References

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