Agreed except I've never seen Dactylopiidae on any of my tests before(3 tests). They are weird looking but they're the most unusual one out of our entire list because they don't even look like an insect, so I'd say they're the easiest to identify. Once you know what it looks like, of course. I also had a lot of grasshoppers and crickets on mine(they tried to mix up some Gryllacrididae and Gryllotalpidae to confuse us. It wasn't very effective.)SOnerd wrote:I have noticed that Dactylopiidae has been on literally every test I've taken (4 tests). Probably because they are weird looking and most kids get confused by them. It was just ID, no actual facts. Also, one of my tests had a lot about grasshoppers and cicadas.jasontang wrote:Hey guys! I was wondering what orders' families people have noticed get tested more often than others. Also, besides using the field guide, what are people doing to efficiently recognize which family in the order a certain insect is? One more thing. How are you formatting your cheat sheets? Thanks!
To ID, I would suggest using the tester (http://scioly.org/users/balsa/public/Sc ... index.html) to help with identification. It helps a ton. Practice makes perfect. I have used my cheat sheet a lot to help me learn (see below)
For my notes, one side is dedicated entirely to information about all 100 families. I usually put on defining characteristics, size, human impact, and diet. For the ones that need it, I put info about the larval forms and life cycle.
The other side is for info about 30 families, the same stuff as above. Also it has types of legs, wings, antennae.... and anatomical diagrams.
The tester that he linked is the best thing in the world. I use it for at least 10 minutes every single day, and somehow you just get enormous satisfaction out of seeing the green Correct! sign over and over again.
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)