Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology Part 80 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
Sub-a.n.a.l plate: Orthoptera; = sub-genital lamina; q.v.
Sub-apical lobe: of male genitalia in Culicids is the inner sub-apical lobe of the side piece.
Sub-apterous: almost wingless; with rudimentary wings only.
Sub-clavate: somewhat thickened toward tip; but not quite club-shaped.
Sub-coriaceous: somewhat leathery.
Sub-cortical: beneath the bark; as in larval borings, etc.
Subcosta: (Comst.); that longitudinal vein extending parallel to the costa and reaching the outer margin before the apex; not branched as a rule of Packard, in Hymenoptera, = radius (Comst.).
Subcostal cell: in Diptera (Schiner), = marginal cell (Loew), = radial 1 (Comst.) in the plural (Comst.), all those cells anteriorly margined by the subcosta first s.c. cell in Hymenoptera (Pack.), = radial and first radial 1 (Comst.).
Subcostal crossveins: in Odonata, are between subcosta and media on the basal side of the first antecubital.
Subcostal fold or furrow: lies between costa and radius.
Subcostal nervule: Lepidoptera, on secondaries:= media 1 (Comst.): s.c. 1 = radius 1 (Comst.); s.c. 2:= radius 2 (Comst.) s.c. 3 = radius 3 (Comst) s.c. 4 = radius 4 (Comst.) s.c. 5 = radius 5 (Comst.).
Subcostal vein: in Diptera (Schiner), = 1st longitudinal vein (Meigen) radius 1 (Comst.): in Lepidoptera, runs from base, parallel to costa, to or beyond the middle, giving rise to branches which extend to the outer margin and thus = radius (Comst.).
Sub-cristate: with a moderately elevated ridge or keel on p.r.o.notum, in Orthoptera.
Subcutaneous: under the skin: applied to larvae that feed under the skin of animals or within the substance of a leaf.
Sub-dorsal: the s.p.a.ce between the dorsum and the stigmata.
Sub-dorsal line: in caterpillars is to the side of the dorsal and between it and the lateral or, if there is an addorsal line, between that and the lateral.
Sub-dorsal ridge: in slug caterpillars, extends longitudinally along the sub-dorsal row of abdominal tubercles.
Sub-equal: similar, but not quite equal in size, form or other characters.
Sub-eroded: wing margins when somewhat, but irregularly, indented.
Sub-falcate: when a wing is only a little excavated below the apex.
Subfamily: a division of cla.s.sification containing a group of closely allied genera; different from other allied groups, yet not so as to make a family series: opinionative, and ending in -inae.
Sub-fossorial: legs used in digging: yet not greatly modified.
Sub-frontal: close to the front; immediately behind the front margin.
Sub-fulcrum: a sclerite between mentum and palpiger: rarely present.
Sub-fusiform: somewhat spindle-shaped.
Subgalea: a maxillary sclerite or segment, attached to the stipes, and bearing the galea or outer lobe.
Sub-geniculate: applied to antennae that are articulated from a short, thick scope.
Subgenital lamina or plates: plates underlying the genital organs in Orthoptera.
Subgenus: a division within a genus, based upon a character not sufficient for generic separation; opinionative.
Subglossa: in Odonata; a sclerite between the two halves of the mentum (Graber): is really the true mentum.
Sub-imago: sometimes applied as = nymph: that stage in Ephemerida just after emergence from the pupa and before the final molt during flight: that stage in the development of insects with free pupa when the insect is fully colored but yet retains its pupal position.
Sub-labrum: =epipharynx; q.v.
Sublingual: beneath the tongue; applied to a pair of salivary glands in bees.
Submargin -al: an imaginary portion of a surface outside of the disk and within the margin: a line is submarginal when it is well within the margin but close to it.
Submarginal area: of secondaries, lies between the costal margin and the 1st strong vein.
Submarginal cells: in Hymenoptera (Norton) = radial cells (Comst.): in Diptera (Will.); = radial 3 (Comst.).
Submarginal nervure: in Hymenoptera (Nort.); the irregular line of veins extending on the whole parallel with the outer margin; composed in part of media 1, 2, 3 and 4, the medial cross vein and cubitus 1 (Comst.).
Submedian cells: in Hymenoptera (Pack.); 1st = cubital + cubital 1 (Comst.) 2d = medial 3 (Comst.); 3d = 2d medial 2 (Comst.).
Submedian vein: in Odonata, =cubitus (Comst.); in Lepidoptera, = 1st a.n.a.l (Comst.), runs from base of primaries to the hind angle, close to the inner margin and is v. 1 of the numerical series.
Submental: pertaining to the sub-mentum.
Submental peduncle: in Coleoptera, the prolonged portion of the gula supporting the mentum.
Submentum: the basal sclerite of the labium, by means of which it is attached to the head.
Subnodal sector: in Odonata, = radial sector (Comst.).
Sub-nymph: applied to the resting or pupal stage of female Coccidae; also to a supernumerary stage before the formation of the pupa, and thus = pseudo-pupa.
Sub-ocellate: an ocellate spot that is blind or without a pupil.
Sub-ocular: beneath or below the eyes.
Sub-oesophageal ganglion: situated in the head below the oesophagus, formed by a union of the posterior three primitive head ganglia.
Sub-order: a division of an order higher than a family, based on a character common to a large series of species; e.g. the h.o.m.optera and Heteroptera in the order of Hemiptera.
Sub-pedunculate: in Coleoptera, when the constriction between pro- and meso-thorax is so great as to give the appearance of a narrow waist.
Subreniform: a rounded spot or outline, below and sometimes attached to the reniform spot in Catocala and some allied Noctuids.