ptero-, pter-, -ptera, -pteron, -pteryx, -ptery, -pterous

(Greek: feather; wing, winglike)

Lepidoptera
1. An order of insects, which includes the butterflies and moths.

They have broad wings, covered with minute overlapping scales, usually brightly colored.

2. An order of the class Insecta that includes the butterflies, moths, and skippers; characterized by scaly wings, sucking mouth parts, and complete metamorphosis.
lepidopteral
Belonging to or pertaining to the Lepidoptera.
lepidopteran
Any of various insects of the order Lepidoptera, characterized by four large, flat, membranous wings covered with small scales.

The larvae of lepidopterans are caterpillars. Lepidopterans include butterflies, moths, and skippers.

lepidopterist
1. An entomologist who specializes in the collection and study of butterflies and moths.
2. A person who studies the order of insects called Lepidoptera, a large order including butterflies and moths.
lepidopterous
A reference to an order of insects comprising the butterflies, moths, and skippers; which in the adult state have four membranous wings more or less covered with small scales.
macropterous
Mecoptera
Megachiroptera
Fruit bats.
Microchiroptera
Most of the bats in the world; all bats except fruit bats; insectivorous bats.

Most microbats feed on insects. Some of the larger species hunt birds, lizards, frogs or even fish. Microbats that feed on the blood of large mammals (vampire bats) exist in South America.

  1. Microbats use echolocation, whereas megabats do not.
  2. Microbats lack the claw at the second toe of the forelimb.
  3. The ears of microbats don't form a closed ring, but the edges are separated from each other at the base of the ear.
  4. Microbats lack the underfur; they have only guard hairs or are naked.
micropterism
micropterous
Neuroptera
Notoptera
odontopteryx
Orthoptera
Primitive winged insects such as cockroaches, locusts, mantises, and crickets.

Related "feather, feather-like; soft down, plumage" word units: penna-; pinni-, pin-; plum-, -plume; pterido-; ptilo-.