Its an Order the varies them I'm not quite sure how many orders there are, but I do know there is an order for moths/butterflys, Beetles, true bugs, dragon/damsel fly, termites, crickets, earwigs, flies/misquitos, and ants/wasps/bees. These are the technical names as far as I know. # ORTHOPTERA: grasshoppers, crickets # COLEOPTERA: beetles # LEPIDOPTERA: butterflies, moths # DIPTERA: flies, mosquitoes # HYMENOPTERA: ants, wasps, bees # HEMIPTERA: true bugs # HOMOPTERA: aphids, cicadas # DERMAPTERA: earwigs # ODONATA: dragonflies # ISOPTERA: termites Source: http://www.backyardnature.net/insects.htm
A mosquito is part of the Animalia kingdom, in the phylum Arthropoda. Its class and order are Insecta and Diptera, respectively. The family is Culicidae, and the species is mosquito. The genus depends on the specific type of mosquito.
Spiders belong to the class Arachnida, which includes other arachnids such as scorpions, ticks, and mites. They are distinct from insects, which belong to the class Insecta.
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and has nothing to do with mitosis, where the nucleus divides.
the middle of the cell wallIt is the nucleus of the cell. It produces identical nuclei
Class Insecta is a taxonomic classification for insects, which are small invertebrates with three main body segments (head, thorax, and abdomen) and six legs. Insects make up the largest group of animals on Earth and play crucial roles in ecosystems as pollinators, decomposers, and food sources for other organisms.
The class Insecta can be further divided into orders based on specific characteristics such as mouthparts, wing structure, and developmental stages. Orders like Diptera (flies) and Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths) are examples of different groupings within the class Insecta.
Termites belong to the class Insecta, which makes them insects.
Butterflies all fall under the phylum arthropoda. They are also a part of the insecta class and Animalia kingdom.
Ants are both.# The ant is in the class Insecta making it an insect. # The class Insecta falls within the kingdom Animalia. # Therefore all ants are insects and thus are also animals.
The scientific name for butterflies is order Lepidoptera, with the classification being Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Arthropoda, Class Insecta.
The fly is in the class of animalia and in the sub-class insectia. An insect is just a more specific type of animal (a class), just like a mammal or a reptile. Living things are classified from large, broad groups into smaller and smaller groups. The largest of these that is important here is a kingdom. Kingdoms are broken up into phyla, which are smaller. Phyla are then broken up into classes, which are broken up into orders, which are broken up into families, etc. Fruit flies are classified into two families (Tephritidae and Drosophilidae) which are parts of the order Diptera (which includes all flies). Diptera is part of the class Insecta (which includes all insects). Insecta is part of the phylum Arthropoda (which include insects, arachnids, and crustaceans). And Arthropoda is part of the kingdom Animalia, or the animal kingdom. If you are looking for the "common fruit fly" its scientific name is Drosophila melanogaster.
A mosquito is part of the Animalia kingdom, in the phylum Arthropoda. Its class and order are Insecta and Diptera, respectively. The family is Culicidae, and the species is mosquito. The genus depends on the specific type of mosquito.
Spiders belong to the class Arachnida, which includes other arachnids such as scorpions, ticks, and mites. They are distinct from insects, which belong to the class Insecta.
Because it has a chitinous exoskeleton, a three-part body (head, thorax, and abdomen), six legs, compound eyes, and two antennae.
Rana tigrina is the commonest frog present around the world. Here I give you the classification of this frog.Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: chordataclass: AmphibiaOrder: Anura / SalientiaFamily: RanidaeGenus: Ranaspecies: tigrina
Mealworms belong to the Animalia kingdom. They are part of the Arthropoda phylum and belong to the insecta class. Their scientific name is Tenebrio molitor.
No they are not. They do not have 6 legs. They are part of a phylum called Annelida. In that phylum they are in a class called Clitellata. In contrast, insects are part or the phylum Arthropoda and the class Insecta,