Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology - novelonlinefull.com
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Remote: further removed than distant.
Reniform: kidney-shaped: applied to a macula approximating that shape, found at the end of median cell in many moths.
Repand: wavy; with alternate segments of circles and intervening angles.
Replicate: wings folded back upon the base; like the secondaries in Coleoptera.
Replicatile: capable of being folded back.
Repugnatorial: serving to repel: so offensive as to drive away: applied to glands that secrete an offensive material.
Reservoir: a case or cavity for the storage of any fluid or secretion.
Resilient: elastic; having the property of springing back.
Respiration: breathing or taking breath: union of oxygen with tissues and liberation of carbon dioxide from same.
Restricted: held back: confined to a limited area.
Resupinate: upside down; horizontally reversed.
Rete: the fatty ma.s.s of insects: also applied generally to any structureless membrane or layer.
Reticulate: like net-work.
Reticulum: a net-work; as of a cell.
Retina: that portion of the eye upon which the image is formed.
Retinaculum: in Lepidoptera, the loop into which the frenulum of the male is fitted; = hamus, q.v.: in Hymenoptera, h.o.r.n.y, movable scales serving to move the sting or to prevent its being darted out too far: in Coleoptera, the middle, tooth-like process of the larval mandible.
Retinal pigment: the pigment layer of the compound eye just above the basilar or fenestrate membrane.
Retinophora: = retinula; q.v.
Retinula -ae: the retina of a single ocellus: the nerve fibres or cells between pigment cells and retina of the compound eye.
Retracted: drawn back; opposed to prominent.
Retractile: capable of being drawn in or retracted.
Retractor: used in drawing in or back; as a muscle.
Retroarcuate: curved backwards.
Retrocession: the going or moving backward.
Retrose: (sinuate), pointing backwards; (serrate) inversely serrated.
Retuse: ending in an obtuse sinus or broad, shallow notch, terminated by an obtuse hollow.
Reversed: turned in, an unusual or contrary direction, as upside down or inside out: said of wings when they are deflexed, the margin of secondaries projecting beyond those of primaries.
Reviviscence: coming back to life; awakening from hibernation.
Revolute: spirally rolled backward.
Rhabdites: the blade-like elements of the sting and ovipositor: a rod or bladelike process projecting from the epidermis.
Rhabdom: the rod lying in the axis of the retinula, below the crystalline cone of an eye.
Rhabdomere: the rod-like distal portion of a retinular cell.
Rhabdopoda: clasping organs of the 9th abdominal segment of male.
Rhinarium: a nostril piece or portion of the nasus: q.v.: in Odonata, the lower portion of clypeus = ante-clypeus; q.v.
Rhipiptera: = Strepsiptera q.v.
Rhomboidal: having the form of a rhomb.
Rhombus: a quadrangular figure having its four sides equal and its opposite lines parallel, with two opposite angles acute and two obtuse.
Rhopalocera: that series of Lepidoptera in which the antenna are alike in both s.e.xes and form a club at tip.
Rhodoptera: apterous insects with sucking mouth structures.
Rhophoteira: an ordinal term for the fleas (Clairville).
Rhynchophora: that section of Coleoptera, in which the head is produced into a snout, at the end of which the mouth structures are situated; gular sutures confluent: prosternal sutures wanting: the weevils.
Rhynchota: = Rhyngota: q.v.
Rhynchus: of Fabricius, = promuscis: q.v.
Rhyngota: insects in which the mouth parts are prolonged into a beak or rostrum which serves as a protection to the piercing lancets: Hemiptera in the broad sense.
Rhythmical: occurring at regular intervals in the production of opposite conditions.
Rigid: inflexible: holding a direct course.
Rima: a crack or longitudinal opening with sharp edges.
Rimose: full of cracks.
Ring: a circle or annulus, usually margining a discolored spot.
Ringent: gaping.