Image of Dasymutilla Ashmead 1899
Description:
Magnified 164X, this scanning electron micrograph (SEM) revealed the morphologic exoskeletal details of a female velvet ants, Dasymutilla sp., leg joint. As a member of the Phylum Arthropoda, i.e., Arthro = jointed, and poda leg, this insect is supported by a jointed exoskeleton, thereby, facilitating mobility of all of its body parts. The velvet ant is not really an ant at all, but a wasp, which merely resembles an ant, hence its name. It is a member of the Family, Mutillidae, and the Order, Hymenoptera.
Note the presence of sensorial hairs upon the surface of the exoskeleton, which are really not hairs as in the mammalian sense, i.e., composed of keratin, but chitinous extensions composed of the same protein as that of the exoskeleton itself. See PHIL 9889 for a higher magnification of this region.
Created: 2007
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life (creatures)
- Cellular (cellular organisms)
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- Opisthokonta (opisthokonts)
- Metazoa (Animal)
- Bilateria
- Protostomia (protostomes)
- Ecdysozoa (ecdysozoans)
- Arthropoda (arthropods)
- Pancrustacea
- Hexapoda (hexapods)
- Insecta (insects)
- Pterygota (winged insects)
- Neoptera (neopteran)
- Endopterygota (endopterygotes)
- Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, and ants)
- Apocrita (wasp)
- Aculeata
- Vespoidea (Yellowjackets and Hornets, Paper Wasps; Potter, Mason and Pollen Wasps and allies)
- Mutillidae (velvet ants)
- Dasymutilla
- Panarthropoda
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Source Information
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- cc-publicdomain
- photographer
- Janice Carr
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- Public Health Image Library
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- Public Health Image Library
- ID