Thursday, July 31, 2014

Just how big can an insect get?

Have you ever wondered how big can some insects become?  We all have seen some really big insects.  But which ones are really big?  Here is a List of largest insects From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  



The longest insects are the stick insects with one specimen held in the Natural History Museum in London measuring 567 mm (22.3 in) in total length.  The beetles (Coleoptera) are the largest order of organisms on earth, with about 350,000 species so far identified.

The most massive species are the Goliathus, Megasoma, and Titanus beetles. The longest species is the Hercules beetle, Dynastes hercules, with a maximum overall length of at least 17 cm (7 in) including the very long pronotal horn.

Praying mantises (Mantodea) with the largest species of this order being the African mantis. The females of this species can attain a length of up to 12 in. Reports of scientists discovering an unidentified species of mantis in southern China in the 1920s of 18 inches (45 cm.) are unconfirmed. Some larger species have been known to capture and consume frogs, lizards, mice, small birds, and even snakes.

Representatives of the extinct dragonfly-like order Meganisoptera such as the Carboniferous Meganeura monyi and the Permian Meganeuropsis permiana are the largest insect species ever known. These creatures had a wingspan of some 75 cm (30 in) and an estimated body weight of over 1 lb (450 g), making them about the size of a crow. This was one big insect!!!

10 Biggest Bugs on Earth  from howstuffworks.com



No comments:

Post a Comment