Biology:Nymph

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Short description: Immature form of some invertebrates
Two Schistocerca gregaria nymphs beside an adult

In biology, a nymph (from Ancient Greek νύμφα nūmphē meaning "bride") is the immature form of some invertebrates, particularly insects, which undergoes gradual metamorphosis (hemimetabolism) before reaching its adult stage.[1] Unlike a typical larva, a nymph's overall form already resembles that of the adult, except for a lack of wings (in winged species). In addition, while a nymph moults, it never enters a pupal stage. Instead, the final moult results in an adult insect.[2] Nymphs undergo multiple stages of development called instars.

This is the case, for example, in Orthoptera (crickets, grasshoppers and locusts), Hemiptera (cicadas, shield bugs, whiteflies, aphids, leafhoppers, froghoppers, treehoppers etc.), mayflies, termites, cockroaches, mantises, stoneflies and Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies).[3]

Nymphs of aquatic insects, as in the Odonata, Ephemeroptera, and Plecoptera, are also called naiads, an Ancient Greek name for mythological water nymphs. Some entomologists have said that it the terms larva, nymph and naiad[4] should be used according to the developmental mode classification (hemimetabolous, paurometabolous or holometabolous) but others have pointed out that there is no real confusion.[5] In older literature, these were sometimes referred to as the heterometabolous insects, as their adult and immature stages live in different environments (terrestrial vs. aquatic).[6]

Relationship with humans

In fly fishing with artificial flies, this stage of aquatic insects is the basis for an entire series of representative patterns for trout.[7] They account for over half of the over all patterns regularly fished in the United States.

See also

References

  1. Encyclopedia of Entomology Ed. John L. Capinera. Dordrecht, London, Springer. 2008, 2nd Ed. ISBN:978-1-4020-6242-1 (Print) 978-1-4020-6359-6 (Online)
  2. Truman, James (1999). "The origins of insect metamorphosis". Nature 401 (6752): 447–52. doi:10.1038/46737. PMID 10519548. Bibcode1999Natur.401..447T. https://scholar.google.com/. 
  3. Britton, David (9 July 2009). "Metamorphosis: a remarkable change". Australian Museum. http://australianmuseum.net.au/metamorphosis-a-remarkable-change. 
  4. Bybee, Seth M.; Hansen, Quinn; Büsse, Sebastian; Cahill Wightman, Haley M.; Branham, Marc A. (2015). "For consistency's sake: the precise use of larva, nymph and naiad within Insecta: The use of larva, nymph and naiad within Insecta" (in en). Systematic Entomology 40 (4): 667–670. doi:10.1111/syen.12136. 
  5. Redei, David; Stys, Pavel (July 2016). "Larva, nymph and naiad - for accuracy's sake.". Systematic Entomology 41 (3): 505–510. doi:10.1111/syen.12177. ISSN 0307-6970. Bibcode2016SysEn..41..505R. 
  6. Tutt, J. W. (1897). "The Nature of Metamorphosis". Proceedings of the South London Entomological & Natural History Society: 20–27. https://archive.org/details/proceedingsofsou18981900sout/page/n191/mode/2up. Retrieved 17 August 2020. 
  7. Austin, Matthew (2004). "Nymph patterns of flies". San Diego: theflystop.com. http://www.theflystop.com/fly-fishing-flies-discount/nymphs.