One adaptation that insects have developed is their ability to reproduce in large amounts. For example, a honey bee queen lays as many as 4,000 eggs a day. This adaptation is a way to continue the species for a long time and was essential to the insects survival for so many years.
Insects get food from many different sources. Their mouths have adapted so they can eat the foods they eat. For example, butterflies have curling tongues so they can reach nectar deep inside the flower. Flies have special tongues with hair to pick up food. If insects had the same mouthparts, one type of food would run out and the others wouldn't be pollinated. Then, the insects wouldn't have food to eat and wouldn't survive.
Many insects adapt to look like their habitats. For example, a walking stick looks like a dead, brown, stick and lives in trees. These adaptations help insects blend in with their surroundings. Camouflage helps them hide from predators or surprise their prey, and is very helpful for survival. The animals live in the habitat which their camouflage matches.
For my cockroach experiment, I wanted to see if the cockroach travels faster on a flat surface or hilly surface. My hypothesis was that it would travel faster if the land was flat because gravity wouldn't affect it as much. When we did the investigation, our hypothesis was correct, and the cockroach traveled faster on a flat surface.