Do Bugs Poop? (2024)

Do Bugs Poop? (1)

Don't think too hard about this on your next picnic, but yes, bugs poop.

Insect poop is called "frass," and it can actually be a useful source of information for entomologists and biologists. New species have even been found in frass. And insects themselves use their poop for some pretty strange things, from inoculating their babies with symbiotic organisms to signaling others in their species to come hang out.

So first, the frass basics. Insect guts are roughly similar to human guts, inasmuch as they usually start with a mouth and end with an anus. The insect digestive system is divided into the foregut, the midgut and the hindgut, said Joe Ballenger, an entomologist who co-runs the website Ask an Entomologist. The foregut stores and grinds food, not unlike a bird's crop, Ballenger told Live Science. Most digestion takes place in the midgut, where nutrients are absorbed into the insect body. The hindgut is not unlike the large intestine, where water is taken back up before waste is excreted. [20 Startling Facts About Insects]

One notable difference between the human gut and the insect gut: When insects shed their exoskeletons, they shed the interior of their guts, too, Ballenger said.

Insect poop usually looks like tiny pellets, Ballenger said, with large insects producing larger poop. Wood-boring insects poop out what essentially looks like sawdust, Ballenger said (because it is sawdust), and co*ckroaches poop out what looks like ordinary household dust (but beware — co*ckroach poop is a nasty allergen). Termites are prolific poopers: Their mounds are made of partially digested wood and fecal material, Ballenger said.

Most insect poop gets recycled back into the environment and acts as fertilizer. But some insects have very specific uses for their frass. Bark beetles excrete pheromones in their feces that invite other bark beetles to come close. These "aggregation pheromones" are a way to attract mates and to kick-start other social behaviors.

And when female stinkbugs lay their eggs, they coat them with a layer of their own poop. As soon as the baby stinkbugs, called nymphs, hatch, they suck the poop off the remains of the eggs, Ballenger said. This turns out to be very important to the babies' health, because the poop contains symbiotic bacteria and other organisms.

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"If you separate [the stinkbugs] from the eggs, or even wash the eggs in a mild bleach solution, all the baby stinkbugs die because they don't get those symbionts," Ballenger said.

Symbionts are of interest to agricultural researchers, who hope that by targeting these crucial gut species, farmers might be able to kill off pests with fewer environmental side effects than traditional pesticides, Ballenger said.

Scientists are just beginning to discover the varied microbes inside insect poop. Researchers have found newspecies of yeast in insect poop in Thailand, in the feces of woodwasps and in the poop of the cocoa pest Conopomorpha cramerella.

But as with all things, there is an exception to the "everyone poops" rule. A few species of insect don't eat — and thus don't poop — in adulthood, Ballenger said. Mayflies and silk moths are examples of insects that have ditched longevity in their adult stage for a brief-but-fruitful burst of reproductive activity.

And then there are species that eat, but don't poop, at least for a while. Lacewings, which prey on many pest species, don't poop in their larval stage, Ballenger said. They have a blind gut (one with just a single opening), and all the waste gets "shoved to the back." When the larvae undergo metamorphosis as adults, the first thing they do is poop out everything they've stored up for their entire youth.

"If you think about human biology," Ballenger said, "that would be a really interesting celebration for a 21st birthday."

Original article on Live Science.

Do Bugs Poop? (2)

Live Science Contributor

Stephanie Pappas is a contributing writer for Live Science, covering topics ranging from geoscience to archaeology to the human brain and behavior. She was previously a senior writer for Live Science but is now a freelancer based in Denver, Colorado, and regularly contributes to Scientific American and The Monitor, the monthlymagazine of the American Psychological Association. Stephanie received a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of South Carolina and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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Do Bugs Poop? (2024)

FAQs

Do bugs have droppings? ›

Insects do poop, but we call their poop "frass." Some insect frass is liquid, while other insects form their frass into pellets. In any case, the insect is eliminating waste from its body through its anus, which meets the definition of poop, for sure. Some insects don't let their waste go to waste.

Do any insects not poop? ›

But as with all things, there is an exception to the "everyone poops" rule. A few species of insect don't eat — and thus don't poop — in adulthood, Ballenger said.

Do bugs excrete waste? ›

Insects excrete, just as we do, but their feces have a more pleasing name: frass. Unlike us, insects molt as they grow up, producing a series of crinkly silhouettes of their outgrown exoskeletons, also called exuviae. This waste may be great news for plants.

What is bug poop called? ›

Frass refers loosely to the more or less solid excreta of insects, and to certain other related matter.

Do bugs feel pain? ›

Indeed, insects are capable of nociception, so they can detect and respond to injury in some circ*mstances [3]. While observations of insects' unresponsiveness to injury warrant further research, they ultimately cannot rule out insect pain, particularly in other contexts or in response to different noxious stimuli.

Do insects urinate? ›

"Surface tension is an invisible kind of force that is very significant for small insects," says Challita. "Just pushing a fluid at a small scale is challenging." The result is that most insects and most small mammals like mice and bats urinate in droplets through smaller orifices.

What color is spider poo? ›

Spider droppings tend to be dark in colour, though white droppings are not unheard of. Depending on what the spider has been eating, shades of brown, black, and gray are all likely. Since the excrement consists mostly of viscous liquids, spider droppings may resemble a small splatter of paint or ink.

What bug doesn t eat? ›

But that's not the luna moth's only interesting feature. The insect doesn't have a mouth or a digestive system. That's because it only lives for about a week after leaving the cocoon, and it doesn't ever eat.

Do ants defecate? ›

Some species, for instance, form “kitchen middens” outside their nests. Those spots are where they dump their wastes, including fecal material. And one common species in Europe has now been caught going to the toilet — an ant toilet!

Do ants feel pain? ›

Despite weaker evidence in other insects, many still show “substantial evidence” for pain. Bees, wasps, and ants fulfil four criteria, while butterflies, moths, crickets, and grasshoppers fulfil three. Beetles, the largest group of insects, only satisfy two criteria.

How dirty are insects? ›

Every time a fly lands, it can leave behind thousands of germs that can cause serious illnesses such as diarrhea, food poisoning, meningitis and bloodstream infections.

Do ants have blood? ›

Ants do have blood. It is called haemolymph. Can Queen Ants fly? Most queen ants have wings when they emerge from the pupa, and they can fly to mate and find new nests.

What is co*ckroach poop called? ›

co*ckroach droppings, also known as frass, are a telltale sign of an infestation in your home. They are typically dark brown or black and come in two distinct shapes: roundish chunks or oval-shaped pellets.

Why do bugs roll poop? ›

Dung beetles can use balls of poo much like air-conditioning units to cool themselves, researchers say. Dung beetles roll up nutritious balls of excrement up to 50 times heavier than their own bodies to feed their young. They roll the balls walking backward, with their heads near the ground.

Can you see co*ckroach poop? ›

co*ckroach feces are easy to identify. Droppings from small co*ckroaches resemble ground coffee or black pepper. Larger roaches leave behind dark, cylindrical droppings with blunt ends and ridges down the side.

Do waterbugs leave droppings? ›

Droppings/Egg Casings: Water bug droppings and their egg casings are both black pellets – slightly larger than co*ckroaches- and hard to discern by the untrained eye. Either can be a warning of a water bug infestation, however.

What do roach droppings look like? ›

co*ckroach feces are easy to identify. Droppings from small co*ckroaches resemble ground coffee or black pepper. Larger roaches leave behind dark, cylindrical droppings with blunt ends and ridges down the side.

Do roaches have droppings? ›

co*ckroaches always leave brown or black, cylindrical droppings wherever they go. In general, co*ckroach droppings are less than 1mm wide and of varying lengths.

What do spider droppings look like? ›

Spider droppings tend to be dark in colour, though white droppings are not unheard of. Depending on what the spider has been eating, shades of brown, black, and gray are all likely. Since the excrement consists mostly of viscous liquids, spider droppings may resemble a small splatter of paint or ink.

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