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ERIC POLRIES
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 ส.ค. 2012
วีดีโอ
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Nice work
Perfect explanation,,,,thank you!
Educative video Thank you for the video
Perfect explanation and educative lecture. Thank you 👍 #Regards #A100/27968/2023
Understood
Nice lesson
Thanks for video. Best entomology greetings!❤😮❤🐛🐜🐝🪲🐞🐞🪱🦠🦠🦋🦋🐛🐜🦋🦋
dawg I'm not even in ur class I just wanna know about bugs my bad
"at least that's how i would draw a dog, being the great artist that i am" king
Mantids are Mantodea, not the same as Orthoptera.
Coleoptera comes from greek, not latin! Otherwise, perfect explanation, thank you ☝️😽
Wish u were my teacher
Heteroptera are called like that, because the front part of their wings are hardened, like the elytra of beetles, and the back part of the wings are membranous.
aren't heteropterans subfamily of hemiptera? and beetles are coleopterans?
Again. Thank you. 🐛
this was excellent,, thank you for making it available, I wished you were my professor, because now I understand.
9:52 i was shouting “shit shit shit” in my mind🤯🥲👄
Where is the Google form?
Hemi- = half Hetero- = different In the insect description of the forewings these two terms are one in the same, describing the forewings as being 'half' solid and 'half' membranous... Okay good so far except it seems redundant... When you throw homo- (same) into the mix, it gets confusing since the forewings are either entirely [homo]membranous (like in cicada) or entirely [homo]solid (like in a leafhopper)... I'm not sure how the sub order homoptera gets grouped in under hemiptera since their forewings contrast the meaning of the term hemi (half)... Would it make sense to just replace hemiptera with the greek word for 'piercing-sucking mouthpart since both heteroptetans and homopterams both share this trait? (Also homopteran have since been subdivided but it doesn't change much as far as grouping a cicada under the order hemi- goes)
Hemiptera in the 'old school' sense gets broken down into hetero and homo... Your description of hemi meaning 'half' seems to describe well the overlapp in wings of hetero, but in the picture of the cicada (subclass homo), there is no overlap of the forewings, but instead they come together like a tent.. Idk, not trying to confuse anyone, just saying
Bugs have fascinated me ever since I was a child, this video was what got me to actually start learning about and appreciating insects, thank you Eric!
It's a headache while studying for a test
@@silverflake2 It is so for you, not every one
@@silverflake2 It's a good headache however, it is so interesting, and it only gets harder from here (as an entomology student) enjoy the insect orders it's the family identification that can really get ya! And then the whole anatomy and internal systems and such :)) GOOD LUCK U CAN DO IT <3
Where are the videos for Skulls, Rodents, and Marine Mammals?
I like his video so much
attapolries
attapolries good video 👍
Thank you
You didn't discuss roaches or termites in either video
unsure about inclusion of mantids in Orthoptera. its bounces between its own (Mantodea) and with cockroaches and termites in super order or order dictyoptera
My prof rn is teaching that mantids are in mantodea. They are predatory compared to the other two.
What do you call that orange bug on hemiptera order?
red cotton stainer
Fyp