Anatomy of Cockroach
Digestive system:
The alimentary canal existing in
the body cavity is spread into three regions:
·
Foregut
·
Midgut
·
Hindgut
• The mouth opens into a short
tubular pharynx, leading to a narrow tubular passage called oesophagus. This in
turn opens into a sac like structure called crop used for storing of food. The
crop is followed by gizzard or proventriculus. It has
an outer layer of thick circular muscles and thick inner cuticle forming six
highly chitinous plate called teeth. Gizzard helps in
grinding the food particles.
• The entire foregut is lined by
cuticle. A ring of 6-8 blind tubules called hepatic or gastric caecae is present at the junction of foregut and midgut,
which secrete digestive juice.
• At the junction of midgut and hindgut
is present another ring of 100-150 yellow coloured thin filamentous Malpighian
tubules. They help in removal of excretory products from haemolymph.
• The hindgut is broader than
midgut and is differentiated into ileum, colon and rectum. The rectum opens out
through anus.
Circulatory system:
• Blood vascular system of
cockroach is an open type. Blood vessels are poorly established and open into
space (haemocoel). Visceral organs located in the haemocoel are bathed in blood (haemolymph). The haemolymph
is composed of colourless plasma and haemocytes.
• Heart of cockroach consists of
elongated muscular tube lying along mid dorsal line of thorax and abdomen. It
is differentiated into funnel shaped chambers with ostia on either side. Blood
from sinuses enter heart through ostia and is pumped anteriorly to sinuses
again.
Respiratory system:
• The respiratory system consists
of a network of trachea, that open through 10 pairs of small holes called
spiracles present on the lateral side of the body.
• Thin branching tubes (tracheal
tubes subdivided into tracheoles) carry oxygen from
the air to all the parts. The opening of the spiracles is regulated by the
sphincters. Exchange of gases take place at the tracheoles
by diffusion.
• Excretion is performed by
Malpighian tubules and each tubule is lined by glandular and ciliated cells.
They absorb nitrogenous waste products and convert them into uric acid which is
excreted out through the hindgut. Therefore, this insect is called uricotelic.
In addition, the fat body, nephrocytes and urecose glands also help in excretion.
Nervous system:
• The nervous system of cockroach
consists of a series of fused, segmentally arranged ganglia joined by paired
longitudinal connectives on the ventral side. Three ganglia lie in the thorax,
and six in the abdomen. The nervous system is spread throughout the body.
• The head holds a bit of a
nervous system while the rest is situated along the ventral (belly-side) part
of its body. In the head region, the brain is represented by supra-oesophageal
ganglion which supplies nerves to antennae and compound eyes.
• In cockroach, the sense organs
are antennae, eyes, maxillary palps, labial palps, anal cerci, etc.
• The compound eyes are situated
at the dorsal surface of the head. Each eye consists of about 2000 hexagonal ommatidia. With the help of several ommatidia,
a cockroach can receive several images of an object. This kind of vision is
known as mosaic vision with more sensitivity but less resolution, being common
during night (hence called nocturnal vision).
Reproductive system:
• Cockroaches are dioecious and
both sexes have well developed reproductive organs.
Male reproductive
system:
Reproductive system of cockroach : male
• Male reproductive system
consists of a pair of testes one lying on each lateral side in the 4th -6th
abdominal segments. From each testis arises a thin vas deferens, which opens
into ejaculatory duct through seminal vesicle. The ejaculatory duct opens into
male gonopore situated ventral to anus.
• A characteristic mushroom shaped
gland is present in the 6th-7th abdominal segments which functions as an
accessory reproductive gland. The external genitalia are represented by male gonapophysis or phallomere (chitinous asymmetrical structures, surrounding the male gonopore). The sperms are stored in the seminal vesicles
and are glued together in the form of bundles called spermatophores
which are discharged during copulation.
Female reproductive
system:
Reproductive system of cockroach : female
• The female reproductive system
consists of two large ovaries, lying laterally in the 2nd – 6th abdominal
segments. Each ovary is formed of a group of eight ovarian tubules or ovaries,
containing a chain of developing ova.
• Oviducts of each ovary unite
into a single median oviduct (also called vagina) which opens into the genital
chamber. A pair of spermatheca is present in the 6th
segment which opens into the genital chamber.
• Sperms are transferred through spermatophores. Their fertilised eggs are encased in
capsules called oothecae. Ootheca
is a dark reddish to blackish brown capsule, about 3/8" (8 mm) long. They
are dropped or glued to a suitable surface, usually in a crack or crevice of
high relative humidity near a food source.
• On an average, females produce
9-10 oothecae, each containing 14-16 eggs. The
development of P. americana
is paurometabolous, meaning there is development through nymphal
stage. The nymphs look very much like adults. The nymph grows by moulting about
13 times to reach the adult form. The next to last nymphal
stage has wing pads but only adult cockroaches have wings.
• Many species of cockroaches are
wild and are of no economic importance. A few species thrive in and around
human habitat. They are pests because they destroy food and contaminate it with
their smelly excreta. They can transmit a variety of bacterial diseases by
contaminating food material.