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From butterflies tasting from their feet to moths hearing from their bellies: How insects use their body parts in unique ways

TOI Trending Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Apr 12, 2025, 02:02 IST
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Insects can taste with their feet and hear with their wings

For insects, which don't have a specifically defined body with particular senses and organs like us humans, various body parts do double the work. While their feet enable movement and stability, they also work as taste receptors. What are some of these strange places where insects have sensory organs?Image credits: Getty Images

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Butterflies taste through their feet

Their feet help them identify delicious flowers that have the sweet nectar they want. This is important as not only do these beautiful creatures consume these nectars but they also feed it to the baby caterpillars. "You've got to make sure you're getting those babies on the right plant," said Katy Prudic, an entomologist at the University of Arizona to National Geographic. Image credits: Getty Images

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Crickets and Locusts taste through their ovipositor

Insects like crickets and locusts have taste receptors in their ovipositor, an organ that deposits their eggs so that they can calculate if the place where they are keeping their offspring is safe or not.Image credits: Getty Images

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Parasitoid Wasps taste through their antennae

For reasons similar to crickets and locusts, Parasitoid wasps receive taste through their antennae to test the potential host for laying their eggs. This involves a test of smell, touch, the presence of other parasitoids and more.

Image credits: Getty Images

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Moths hear through their bellies

Moths such as geometer moths, looper moths, snout moths, hooktip and false owlet moths, detect movement and other sounds through a kind of ear called tympanum, located on their abdomen.Image credits: Getty Images

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Katydids and Grasshoppers hear through their knees

Katydids and Grasshoppers have specialized hearing organs called tympanal organs near the base of their hind legs. These organs have membrane-like eardrums that vibrate in response to sound.Image credits: Getty Images

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Yellow Swallowtail Butterflies see with their genitals

Kentaro Arikawa from the Graduate University for Advanced Studies in Japan discovered photoreceptor cells in the genitalia of these butterflies in 1980. In a 2001 paper, he explained that the ability to see is vital for these butterflies to reproduce, which is why they mate while facing away from each other.

Image credits: Getty Images

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Copyright © Jun 5, 2026, 11.54PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service