Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology Part 52
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Monomeri: insects with one-jointed tarsi.
Monomorphic: species of which only one s.e.x (female) is known to exist.
Monophagous: insects feeding upon only one species or genus of plants.
Monothelious: a union where one female is fecundated by many males.
Monotrocha -ous: Hymenoptera in which the trochanters are single: having legs in which the trochanter is one-jointed.
Monotypical: a genus described from a single species, no other being known; or described from a single specified species with which are a.s.sociated others believed to be identical in structure: see isotypical and heterotypical.
Moult: a period in the transformation when the larva changes from one instar to another: the cast skin of a larva that has moulted.
Mouth: the anterior opening into the alimentary ca.n.a.l, where the feeding structures are situated and in which the food is prepared for ingestion.
Mouth-parts: a collective name including labrum, mandibles, maxillae, labium and appendages = trophi.
Mucoreus: mouldy: a surface covered with small, fringe-like processes.
Mucro: a long, straight or curved process terminating in a point: the pro-sternal process in Elateridae: the terminal spine or process of an obtect pupa: "the median posterior point of the epigastrium when differentiated by elevation."
Mucronate: terminated in a sharp point.
Mucrones: in Collembola the two small end pieces of the furcula, proceeding from the dentes.
Mullerian a.s.sociation: a group of species belonging to different genera, often different families or even orders, having similar colors, possessing more or less distasteful qualities and living in the same locality.
Muller's thread: the common terminal thread of all the ovarian tubes.
Multangulate: with many angles.
Multi-: many; used as a prefix, often without the i.
Multiarticulate: with many joints or segments.
Multilocular: with many large cells, s.p.a.ces or cavities.
Multipart.i.te: divided into many parts.
Multiplicate: with many longitudinal folds or lines of plication.
Multispinose: with many spines.
Mumia: the pupa.
Munite -us: armed; provided with an armature.
Muricate -us: armed with sharp, rigid points.
Murinus: mouse colored [gray with some yellow].
Mushroom bodies: two stalked, mushroom-like bodies arising from procerebral lobes; supposed to be the seat of insect intelligence.
Muscle: the fleshy fibres of the insect body that serve to move the appendages and other body organs.
Mute: silent: without power to produce audible sound.
Mutic -us: unarmed: lacking processes where such usually occur.
Mutici: Acridiids without a posternal spines.
Mutilate -us: cut off: mutilated: abbreviated: not complete.
Mycetophagous: feeding upon fungi.
Myiasis: disease or injury caused by the attack of dipterous larvae.
Myoblast: a cell that produces muscular tissue.
Myrmecology: that branch of entomology that deals with ants.
Myrmecophilous: ant-loving: applied to insects that live in ant nests.
Mystacine -us: bcarded: with a hairy fringe above mouth or on clypeus.
Mystax: in Diptera; a patch of hair or bristles above the mouth, on the lower part of the hypostoma above the vibrissae.
Mytiliform: sh.e.l.l-like; as the middle feet in some aquatic Hemiptera.
N
Nacreous: pearly: resembling mother of pearl := margaritaceous.
Nail: a tarsal claw: specifically the stout pointed claws in predatory Heteroptera = unguis.
Naked: not clothed: lacking vest.i.ture: a pupa when not inclosed in a coc.o.o.n or other covering.
Nasal suture: =clypeal suture; q.v.
Nasus: anterior termination of the face in certain Hymenoptera: the clypeus or a modification of it: in Odonata, the upper portion of the clypeus = supra-clypeus = postclypeus.
Nasuti: that type of termite soldiers that have the head prolonged into a point.
Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology Part 52
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