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Reasons for the dominance of insects over other animals
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BENEFICIAL AND HARMFUL EFFECTS OF INSECTS
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Learn Introductory Entomology with Rahul
  1. Cuticle:
  • The cuticle is an outer layer which contains a characteristic chemical compounds called chitin, proteins and pigments.
  • The cuticle is made up of three principal layers: epicuticle, exocuticle and endocuticle.
  • The exo- and endo- cuticle together referred as procuticle.

No description available.

 

Principle Layers of the Cuticle

a) Epicuticle :Epicuticle is the outer, thin, delicate layer without any chitin and may have four sub- layers. They are:

 

I. Inner epicuticle: it is the thickest layer of 0.5 to 2.0 µm immediately outside the procuticle and chemically consists of tanned lipoproteins.

 

ii. Outer epicuticle: This is very thin trilaminar layer only of about 15 nm.The material forming the outer epicuticle is highly polymerized lipid is often referred to as cuticulin.

 

iii. Epicuticular wax layer: Wax comprises over 90% and is important in water proofing the cuticle.

 

iv. Cuticular cement layer: It consists of mucopolysaccharide. It protects underlying wax and no produced by all insects.

 

 

b. Exocuticle:

  • It is a thicker layer below epicuticle and is often darker and harder than the rest.
  • It contributes rigidity and toughness to the cuticle.
  • The exocuticle structurally consists mainly of chitin and protein.
  • Other constituents of cuticle include quinones which polymerized to form dark brown or black pigment known as melanin and in others quinones are utilized in forming sclerotin.

 

c. Endocuticle:

  • The inner undifferentiated part below the exocuticle is endocuticle and is characterized by the presence of chitin.
  • It provides space for attachment of muscles of antenna and mouthparts, called as Tentorium.

 

 

  1. Epidermis:
  • It is below endocuticle and are glandular and secrete cuticle and the enzymes for the cuticle formation and digestion at the time of molting.

 

 

  1. Basement membrane:
  • Also called basal lamila and is a noncellular layer beneath epidermis and serves as stable platform where epidermal cells are anchored and muscles are attached.

 

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