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Human interactions with insects information


The "Spanish fly", Lytta vesicatoria, has been considered to have medicinal, aphrodisiac, and other properties.

Human interactions with insects include both a wide variety of uses, whether practical such as for food, textiles, and dyestuffs, or symbolic, as in art, music, and literature, and negative interactions including damage to crops and extensive efforts to control insect pests.

Academically, the interaction of insects and society has been treated in part as cultural entomology, dealing mostly with "advanced" societies, and in part as ethnoentomology, dealing mostly with "primitive" societies, though the distinction is weak and not based on theory. Both academic disciplines explore the parallels, connections and influence of insects on human populations, and vice versa. They are rooted in anthropology and natural history, as well as entomology, the study of insects. Other cultural uses of insects, such as biomimicry, do not necessarily lie within these academic disciplines.

More generally, people make a wide range of uses of insects, both practical and symbolic. On the other hand, attitudes to insects are often negative, and extensive efforts are made to kill them. The widespread use of insecticides has failed to exterminate any insect pest, but has caused resistance to commonly-used chemicals in a thousand insect species.

Practical uses include as food, in medicine, for the valuable textile silk, for dyestuffs such as carmine, in science, where the fruit fly is an important model organism in genetics, and in warfare, where insects were successfully used in the Second World War to spread disease in enemy populations. One insect, the honey bee, provides honey, pollen, royal jelly, propolis and an anti-inflammatory peptide, melittin; its larvae too are eaten in some societies. Medical uses of insects include maggot therapy for wound debridement. Over a thousand protein families have been identified in the saliva of blood-feeding insects; these may provide useful drugs such as anticoagulants, vasodilators, antihistamines and anaesthetics.

Symbolic uses include roles in art, in music (with many songs featuring insects), in film, in literature, in religion, and in mythology. Insect costumes are used in theatrical productions and worn for parties and carnivals.

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Human interactions with insects

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Anthrozoology

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Anthrozoology, also known as human–nonhuman-animal studies (HAS), is the subset of ethnobiology that deals with interactions between humans and other animals. It...

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Apitherapy

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2016. Berenbaum, May R. (January 1995). Bugs in the System: Insects and Their Impact on Human Affairs. Helix Books. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-201-62499-1. Palmer...

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Moth

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Moths are a group of insects that includes all members of the order Lepidoptera that are not butterflies. They were previously classified as suborder...

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Cyborg

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implant artificial structures into insects during their metamorphic development. The first insect cyborgs, moths with integrated electronics in their thorax...

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Human interactions with fungi

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Human interactions with fungi include both beneficial uses, whether practical or symbolic, and harmful interactions such as when fungi damage crops, timber...

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Flea circus

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the Flea (c. 1833) also promoted flea circuses.: 314  Flea performances with military themes such as staged "sword fights" among fleas, were popular in...

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Eusociality

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physical dominance interactions among foundresses of the colony including biting, chasing, and food soliciting. Such interactions create a dominance hierarchy...

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Insect ecology

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Insect ecology is the interaction of insects, individually or as a community, with the surrounding environment or ecosystem. Insects play significant roles...

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Insect

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animal species. The insect nervous system consists of a brain and a ventral nerve cord. Most insects reproduce by laying eggs. Insects breathe air through...

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Deathwatch beetle

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aged oak timbers, which the beetles prefer. To attract mates, the adult insects create a tapping or ticking sound that can sometimes be heard in the rafters...

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Entomology

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ἔντομον (entomon) 'insect', and -λογία (-logia) 'study') is the scientific study of insects, a branch of zoology. In the past the term insect was less specific...

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Human

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groups to corporations and political states. As such, social interactions between humans have established a wide variety of values, social norms, languages...

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Mycobiome

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communities new sources of plant energy at the genomic level. Interactions between fungi and insects are incredibly common and most of these relationships are...

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Arthropods in film

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"Beautiful Bugs, Bothersome Bugs, and FUN Bugs: Examining Human Interactions with Insects and Other Arthropods". Anthrozoös. 30 (3): 357–372. doi:10...

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Insects as feed

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Insects as feed are insect species used as animal feed, either for livestock, including aquaculture, or as pet food. As livestock feed production uses...

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Symbiosis

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persistent biological interactions (in other words, to mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism, but excluding brief interactions such as predation). In...

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Pheromone

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Some insects, such as ghost moths, use pheromones during lek mating. Traps containing pheromones are used by farmers to detect and monitor insect populations...

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Injury

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any organism, whether in humans, in other animals, or in plants. Injuries can be caused in many ways, such as mechanically with penetration by sharp objects...

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Corpse decomposition

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temperatures below 4 °C. Corpse farms are also used to study the interactions of insects with decaying bodies. Payne, Jerry A. (September 1965). "A Summer...

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Scutigera coleoptrata

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the world, where it can live in human homes. It is an insectivore; it kills and eats other arthropods, such as insects and arachnids. In 1758, Carl Linnaeus...

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Companion planting

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control, including by providing habitat for beneficial insects. Companion planting can reduce insect damage to crops, whether by disrupting pests' ability...

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Insect biodiversity

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considered insects, so over 50% of all described eukaryotes (1.8 million species) are insects (see illustration). With only 950,000 known non-insects, if the...

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Carpenter ant

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typically eat parts of other dead insects or substances derived from other insects. Common foods for them include insect parts, "honeydew" produced by aphids...

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