The name Apterygota is sometimes applied to a former subclass of small, agile , distinguished from other insects by their lack of wings in the present and in their evolutionary history; notable examples are the silverfish, the firebrat, and the Archaeognatha. Their first known occurrence in the fossil record is during the Devonian period, 417–354 million years ago. The group Apterygota is not a clade; it is paraphyletic, and not recognized in modern classification schemes. As defined, the group contains two separate clades of wingless insects: Archaeognatha comprises jumping bristletails, while Zygentoma comprises silverfish and firebrats. The Zygentoma are in the clade Dicondylia with winged insects, a clade that includes all other insects, while Archaeognatha is sister to this lineage.A. Blanke, M. Koch, B. Wipfler, F. Wilde, B. Misof (2014) Head morphology of Tricholepidion gertschi indicates monophyletic Zygentoma. Frontiers in Zoology 11:16 doi:10.1186/1742-9994-11-16
The nymphs (younger stages) go through little or even no metamorphosis, hence they resemble the adult specimens (ametabolism). Currently, no species are listed as being at conservation risk.
Apterygotes also have a number of other primitive features not shared with other insects. Males deposit sperm packages, or , rather than fertilizing the female internally. When hatched, the young closely resemble adults and do not undergo any significant metamorphosis, and lack even an identifiable nymphal stage. They continue to molt throughout life, undergoing multiple after reaching sexual maturity, whereas all other insects undergo only a single instar when sexually mature.
Apterygotes possess small unsegmented appendages, referred to as "styli", on some of their abdomen segments, but play no part in locomotion. They also have long, paired abdominal Cercus and a single median, tail-like caudal filament, or telson.
While all members of winged insects (Pterygota) has a closed amniotic cavity during embryonic development, this varies within Apterygota. In Archaeognatha, species like Petrobius brevistylis and Pedetontus unimaculatus have a wide open cavity, whereas Trigoniophthalmus alternatus does not have an amniotic cavity at all. In Zygentoma, the cavity is open through a narrow canal called the amniopore in the species Thermobia domestica and Lepisma saccharina, but in other species like Ctenolepisma lineata it is completely closed. Insect Metamorphosis: From Natural History to Regulation of Development and Evolution
However, the Zygentoma are now considered more closely related to the Pterygota than to the Archaeognatha, thus rendering even the amyocerate apterygotes paraphyletic, and resulting in the dissolution of Thysanura into two separate monophyletic orders.
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