Ecology
Hemipterans are hemimetabolous, meaning that they do not undergo metamorphosis between a larval phase and an adult phase.
Instead, their young are called nymphs, and resemble the adults to a large degree, the final transformation involving little more than the development of functional wings (if they are present at all) and functioning sexual organs, with no intervening pupal stage as in holometabolous insects.
Hemiptera is the largest insect order that is hemimetabolous; the orders with more species all have a pupal stage (Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera and Hymenoptera).
Many aphids are parthenogenetic during part of the life cycle, such that females can produce unfertilized eggs, which are clones of themselves.
Most hemipterans are phytophagous, feeding on plant sap, such as aphids, scale insects and cicadas.
Most of the remainder are predatory, feeding on other insects, or even small vertebrates.
A few, however, are parasites, feeding on the blood of larger animals.
These include bedbugs and the kissing bugs of the family Reduviidae,
which can transmit potentially deadly Trypanosoma infections.
Several families of Hemiptera are water bugs, adapted to an aquatic lifestyle, such as the water boatmen and water scorpions.
They are mostly predatory, and have legs adapted as paddles to help the animal move through the water.
The "pondskaters" or "water striders" of the family Gerridae are also associated with water,
but use the surface tension of standing water to keep them above the surface;
they include the genus Halobates which is the only group of insects to be truly marine.