Entomology, study of insects  an arthropod class that comprises about 900,000 known species,  representing about three fourths of all the classified animal species.  Insects are studied because of their importance as pollinators for fruit  crops; as carriers of bacterial, viral, and fungal diseases; as  parasites of humans or livestock; as destroyers of economically  important plants; or as predators of other destructive insects. The role  of insects in ecosystems and their control by insecticides or by  biological methods are studied in ecology. Some insects such as the fruit fly, Drosophila, are used in the laboratory to study genetics;  others are used to study behavior and physiology. The ability to  increase productivity of insect populations that supply commercially  important products such as dyes, silk, and honey and the deliberate  introduction of insect diseases into populations of insect pests  involves knowledge of microbiology and biochemistry as well as  entomology.
What is Insect? 
                      A small tracheal arthropod animals of the class  Insecta, having an adult stage characterized by three pairs of legs and a  body segmented into head, thorax, and abdomen and usually having two  pairs of wings. Insects include the flies, crickets, mosquitoes,  beetles, butterflies, and bees.

 
