Termite - a social insect that lives in hill colonies; it eats away at wood with its crushing mouthpieces.
Shield bug - a small flat-bodied land insect that stings and sucks, a parasite of humans, animals and plants; it releases an unpleasant odor as a defense.
Ladybug (or in the UK, ladybird), a kind of beetle, a brightly colored round-bodied insect that preys on aphids and mealybugs.
Fly - a stocky insect of drab or metallic coloring and having a proboscis, two wings and short antennae; there are numerous species.
Ant - a small social insect living in a highly complex colony; it has developed jaws and might or might not have wings
Dragonfly - a colourful insect with long body.
Butterfly, Moth, Bee, Wasp, Grasshopper, ...
mosquitoes
fruit flies
black fliesladybugs
mayflies
silverfish
dragonflies
crickets
cockroaches
grasshoppers
walkingsticks
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Mosquitos (but only pregnant females), horseflies, fleas, lice, and some true bugs (Hemiptera) though none of those feed on humans.
There are hundreds of thousands of species of insects. However, some insect males are called bulls, boars, and bucks. Some do not have specific gender names.
Some examples of herbivorous insects are caterpillars, grasshoppers, beetles, and aphids. These insects feed primarily on plants and plant materials for their nutrition.
Not all insects are herbivores; some insects are carnivores (eating other insects or animals) or omnivores (eating both plants and animals). Herbivorous insects feed on plants for sustenance.
Some examples of asexual animals are flatworms, starfish, and certain species of insects like aphids. These animals are capable of reproducing without the need for a mate through processes such as fragmentation, budding, or parthenogenesis.