Nepomorpha
Nepomorpha | |
---|---|
Nepa cinerea, a water scorpion | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hemiptera |
Suborder: | Heteroptera |
Infraorder: | Nepomorpha |
Superfamilies | |
Aphelocheiroidea | |
Synonyms | |
Cryptocerata |
Nepomorpha is an infraorder of insects in the "true bug" order (Hemiptera). They belong to the "typical" bugs of the suborder Heteroptera. Due to their aquatic habits, these animals are known as true water bugs. They occur all over the world outside the polar regions, with about 2,000 species altogether. The Nepomorpha can be distinguished from related Heteroptera by their missing or vestigial ocelli. Also, as referred to by the obsolete name Cryptocerata ("the hidden-horned ones"), their antennae are reduced, with weak muscles, and usually carried tucked against the head.[1]
Most of the species within this infraorder live in freshwater habitats. The exceptions are members of the superfamily Ochteroidea, which are found along the water's edge. Many of these insects are predators of invertebrates and in some cases – like the large water scorpions (Nepidae) and giant water bugs (Belostomatidae) – even small fish and amphibians. Others are omnivores or feed on plants. Their mouthparts form a rostrum as in all Heteroptera and most Hemiptera. With this, they pierce their foodstuffs to suck out fluids; some, like the Corixidae, are also able to chew their food to some extent, sucking up the resulting pulp. The rostrum can also be used to sting in defence; some, like the common backswimmer (Notonecta glauca) of the Notonectidae can easily pierce the skin of humans and deliver a wound often more painful than a bee's sting.
Systematics
The Nepomorpha probably originated around the start of the Early Triassic, some 250 million years ago. As evidenced by fossils such as the rather advanced Triassocoridae or the primitive water boatman Lufengnacta, the radiation establishing today's superfamilies seems to have been largely complete by the end of the Triassic 200 million years ago. There are a large number of fossil genera, but except those placed in Triassocoridae they can at least tentatively be assigned to the extant superfamilies.[1]
Though the systematics and phylogeny of the higher taxa of Nepomorpha were long controversial, cladistic analysis of mitochondrial 16S and nuclear 28S rDNA sequence data and morphology has more recently resolved to near-perfection. The long-accepted superfamilies are all monophyletic, with the exception of the Naucoroidea, which is now monotypic with the Aphelocheiridae and Potamocoridae being split off in a new superfamily Aphelocheiroidea. The Cibariopectinata, a proposed clade established on the presence of cibariopectine structures in the food-sucking pump of some of the most advanced true water bugs (Tripartita), might indeed be monophyletic. Alternatively it might be synonymous with the Tripartita, the Ochteroidea having lost the cibariopectines again due to the different requirements of their (for Nepomorpha) unusual lifestyle.[1]
The following list arranges of superfamilies in evolutionary sequence, from the most ancient to the most modern lineage:[1]
- Infraorder Nepomorpha
- Superfamily Nepoidea
- Family Belostomatidae – giant water bugs
- Family Nepidae – water scorpions
- Superfamily Corixoidea
- Family Corixidae – water boatmen
- Clade Tripartita
- Superfamily Ochteroidea
- Family Gelastocoridae – toad bugs
- Family Ochteridae – velvety shore bugs
- Clade Cibariopectinata (disputed)
- Family Triassocoridae (fossil; tentatively placed here)
- Superfamily Aphelocheiroidea
- Family Aphelocheiridae
- Family Potamocoridae
- Superfamily Naucoroidea
- Family Naucoridae – creeping water bugs
- Superfamily Notonectoidea
- Family Notonectidae – backswimmers
- Superfamily Pleoidea (sometimes included in Notonectoidea)
- Family Helotrephidae
- Family Pleidae – pygmy backswimmers
- Superfamily Ochteroidea
Footnotes
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nepomorpha. |
Wikispecies has information related to: Nepomorpha |
- 1 2 3 4 Martin B. Hebsgaard, Nils M. Andersen & Jakob Damgaard (2004). "Phylogeny of the true water bugs (Nepomorpha: Hemiptera–Heteroptera) based on 16S and 28S rDNA and morphology" (PDF). Systematic Entomology 29 (4): 488–508. doi:10.1111/j.0307-6970.2004.00254.x.
Further reading
- Mikko Haaramo (2008): Mikko's Phylogeny Archive - Nepomorpha.