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Like all hemiptera, it feeds through a long mouthpart known as a rostrum.
The head has compound eyes, a mandible mouthpart, and shortened antennae.
The Hister's mouthpart grasps and grinds the food with two teeth.
They can deal with the chemical defences in the latex, which does not cause the problem of mouthpart coagulation.
To cure the wound they would use their pierced-sucked mouthpart, which they use to get plant cells.
They are typically the largest mouthpart of chewing insects, being used to masticate (cut, tear, crush, chew) food items.
The asymmetric mouthpart mandibles of the B. cephalotes are blunt and long; the length is almost double their width.
When their mouthpart penetrates the phloem, the sugary, high-pressure liquid is forced out of the gut's terminal opening.
Like all heteropterans, jewel bugs are characterized by a segmented beak-like mouthpart (known as the rostrum).
The whiteflies (and aphids) suck the sap from the leaves by puncturing the veins with a strawlike mouthpart.
Labrum (arthropod mouthpart)
The hypostome is the hard mouthpart of the trilobite found on the ventral side of the cephalon typically below the glabella.
These are not used in retrieval of a food source, like a piercing mouthpart, but are instead used to aid digestion and breakdown of nutrients.
Like all hemipterans, instead of mandibles for chewing, tesseratomids possess a piercing-sucking mouthpart for feeding (known as the rostrum).
The mouthpart consists of the basic: labrum, clypeus, labium, maxillae, mandible and labial palp.
Omnidens, meaning "all tooth", is a genus of Cambrian priapulid originally mistaken for a Parapeytoia mouthpart.
In the female, the pilus dentilis, a sensory organ on the chelicera (mouthpart), is serrate, not smooth as in A. gymnuromys.
Labium (arthropod mouthpart), a mouthpart of arthropods (the lower "lip")
Unlike his Swedish contemporary Carl Friedrich Fallen he based higher categories on a combination of characters not following Fabricius in using mouthpart characters alone.
The vector leafhopper feeds on the phloem of aster yellows infected plants by inserting their straw-like mouthpart, a stylet, into the cell and extracting it.
They possessed an inflated frons and a long rostrum (piercing and sucking mouthpart), indicating that they fed on xylem fluids like some other modern hemipterans.
The larvae then use their piercing mouthpart, called the "stylet", to pass through the intestinal mucosa and enter the lymphatic vessels, and then enter the bloodstream.
The Anopheles mosquito, a vector for Malaria, Filariasis and various arthropod-borne-viruses (arboviruses), inserts its delicate mouthpart under the skin and feeds on its host's blood.
That order name tells it all: Fleas have a siphon, a Draculian mouthpart that sucks the life blood from whatever animal their genes have programmed them to latch onto.