The Importance Of Entomology

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Insects have an enormous population in our planet and are being studied in the field of entomology. A single insect would be able to show the beauty our planet has. Many of the insects are considered threats and pests but a lot of them are also beneficial. If we would like to utilize these creatures, we should be able to have an outlook of how an expert in this field view insects- in the view of an entomologist.
Entomology is like a gateway discipline to many other areas of the biological sciences. That is, insects are so important to the ecology of the earth, human health and agriculture, that the career opportunities related to insects are limitless. In addition, insects are excellent and ubiquitous model systems for many types of research from molecular biology to ecosystem function. I think the bottom line is insects are so important to humans that many solid sources of funding are available, and this leads to jobs (Mason, …show more content…

Museum workers take advantage of this fact, using established colonies of carpet beetles to clean skeletons of mammals. Carpet beetles feed on almost anything organic, including cereals, carpets, and dried insects in collections—much to the chagrin of entomologists. Without insects, Earth would be awash in trash—dead leaves and all manner of refuse are all fed upon by insects. Bacteria are the final decomposers, but efficiency rises when larger organisms first prepare plant material for decomposition, to a large extent by eating leaves and producing fecal pellets. (Hevel, 2005) Because the bodies of insects are largely composed of nitrogen, upon their death this important ingredient is returned to the soil. Enormous amounts of nitrogen were recycled to the soil in 2004 after the emergence and deaths of trillions of 17-year cicadas in the eastern United States. (Importance of the subject matter to the study; Insects help in decomposition of organic

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