Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Clickable Guide

Interactive image map to choose major taxa Moths Butterflies Flies Caterpillars Flies Dragonflies Flies Mantids Cockroaches Bees and Wasps Walkingsticks Earwigs Ants Termites Hoppers and Kin Hoppers and Kin Beetles True Bugs Fleas Grasshoppers and Kin Ticks Spiders Scorpions Centipedes Millipedes

Calendar

Upcoming Events

2026 BugGuide gathering in Big Bend National Park, Texas. Register now!

National Moth Week and the 2025 gathering in Louisiana was July 19-27

Photos of insects and people from the 2024 BugGuide gathering in Idaho July 24-27

Moth submissions from National Moth Week 2024

Photos of insects and people from the 2022 BugGuide gathering in New Mexico, July 20-24

Photos of insects and people from the Spring 2021 gathering in Louisiana, April 28-May 2

Class Insecta - Insects

Representative Images

Fragile Forktail Damselfly - Ischnura posita - female Mallophora fautrix - oviposition - Mallophora fautrix - female Red Headed Bush Cricket - Phyllopalpus pulchellus - female Pennsylvania Moth - Plagodis pulveraria - female Ants or Termites - Lasius interjectus Catorhintha texana - female Staphylinidae, tiny Hadromychus? - Hadromychus lawrencei

Classification

Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Subphylum Hexapoda (Hexapods)
Class Insecta (Insects)

Synonyms and other taxonomic changes

arrangement of major extant taxa based on molecular data in (1)

Explanation of Names

Insecta Linnaeus 1758
Latin insectum, pl. insecta "cut into, cut up" (refers to body segmentation), a translation of Greek entomon

Numbers

~30 extant + a dozen extinct orders, ~1500 families, and well over a million described species
In our area, 28 orders, >600 families, ~12,500 genera, >86,000 spp.(2)(3)

Identification

Three pairs of legs
Three body parts: headthoraxabdomen
typically two pair of wings; some have one pair or none
One pair of antennae

Range

worldwide

Habitat

aquatic marine forms conspicuously absent

Life Cycle

Hemimetabolous insects (e.g., dragonflies, mayflies, true bugs, grasshoppers) undergo gradual, or incomplete, metamorphosis. Immature stages (usually called nymphs) go through a series of molts, gradually assuming an adult form. Since the wings develop on the outside of the body, these groups are called exopterygotes. Some orders have immature stages that are aquatic. These possess specialized structures for aquatic life, such as gills, and are called naiads, or by some authors larvae.
Holometabolous insects (Endopterygota or Holometabola) have a four-stage life cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult (imago).
Neuroptera - Antlions - Lacewings and allies
Rhaphidioptera - Snakeflies
Megaloptera - Alderflies, Dobsonflies, and Fishflies
Coleoptera - Beetles
Hymenoptera - Ants, Bees, Wasps and Sawflies
Trichoptera - Caddisflies
Lepidoptera - Butterflies and Moths
Mecoptera - Scorpionflies, Hangingflies and Allies
Diptera - Flies
Strepsiptera - Twisted-winged Insects
Siphonaptera - Fleas
(4)

Print References

Stork N.E. (2018) How many species of insects and other terrestrial arthropods are there on Earth? Ann. Rev. Entomol. 63: 31‒45. Full text

Internet References

Works Cited

1.Phylogenomics resolves the timing and pattern of insect evolution
Bernhard Misof et al. 2014. Science Vol. 346, 763.
2.American Insects: A Handbook of the Insects of America North of Mexico
Ross H. Arnett. 2000. CRC Press.
3.Evolution of the Insects
David Grimaldi and Michael S. Engel. 2005.
4.How to Know the Immature Insects
Hung-Fu Chu, Laurence K Cutkomp. 1992. Wm. C. Brown Publishers.