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Phylum Arthropoda

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Phylum Arthropoda Phylum and Subphyla Characteristics Phylum Characteristics: segmented body (tagmata), chitinous exoskeleton; jointed appendages; highly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Phylum Arthropoda


1
Phylum Arthropoda Phylum and Subphyla
Characteristics
  • Phylum Characteristics segmented body (tagmata),
    chitinous exoskeleton jointed appendages
    highly developed sense organs and complex
    behavior patterns (incl. social systems)
  • Overview of Diversity and Characteristics of
    Subphyla
  • Subphylum Trilobita extinct trilobites (most
    common in the Paleozoic) cephalon (head
    segment) with compound eyes, mouth, and antennae
  • Subphylum Chelicerata extinct eurypterids (up to
    3 m long), horseshoe crabs, sea spiders,
    spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites six pairs
    of cephalothoracic appendages (incl. pair of
    chelicerae for sucking liquid food), plus four
    pairs of walking legs lack antennae
  • Subphylum Myriapoda centipedes, millipedes,
    others mandibles one or two pairs of uniramous
    appendages on most or all trunk segments
  • Subphylum Crustacea crabs, shrimps, and other
    aquatic forms biramous appendages, often
    modified gills present carapace
  • Subphylum Hexapoda insects head, thorax, and
    abdomen three pairs of legs wings often
    present highly modified mouthparts

2
Fig. 19.4
3
Fig. 19.1
4
Fig. 19.2
5
Subphyla Chelicerata and Myriapoda
  • Subphylum Chelicerata (extant forms)
  • Horseshoe crabs hinged carapace and tail-like
    telson book gills trilobite larvae mass
    spawnings provide food for shorebirds
  • Sea spiders (pycnogonids) most abundant in polar
    oceans some duplicated segments result in 5-6
    pairs of legs
  • Class Arachnida (earliest terrestrial animals,
    Silurian)
  • Spiders cephalothorax and abdomen joined by
    slender pedicel fangs with venom glands (incl.
    black widow, brown recluse, tarantulas) many
    with silk glands and webs eight simple eyes
    control populations of insects
  • Scorpions stingers with venom glands (some can
    be fatal) complex mating dance viviparous
    development , young develop on females back
  • Ticks and mites fusion of tagmata ticks suck
    blood and can spread disease (ex. Lyme disease)
    mites important agricultural pests include
    commensal hair follicle mite (Demodex) and itch
    mite (cause of scabies)
  • Sun and whip scorpions include local camel
    spiders
  • Subphylum Myriapoda paired appendages on nearly
    all trunk segments
  • Class Chilopoda centipedes venomous, active
    carnivores (tropical species can be dangerous to
    humans) up to 177 segments with most bearing
    pair of jointed legs
  • Class Diplopoda millipedes slow, herbivorous
    secrete toxic or repellent fluids from body
    abdominal segments with two pairs of legs (the
    appearance of a thousand feet)

6
Fig. 19.5
7
Fig. 19.6
8
Fig. 19.7
Sonograph of Sea Spider Fossil
9
Fig. 19.8
10
Fig. 19.10
11
Fig. 19.13
12
Fig. 19.14
13
Fig. 19.15
14
Fig. 19.18 and 19.19
15
Fig. 19.21
16
Fig. 19.22
17
Fig. 19.23
18
The Crustaceans Diversity and Class
Characteristics
  • Diversity insects of the sea about 67,000
    described species, some extremely abundant (ex.
    copepods)
  • Class Remipedia inhabit caves with connections
    to the sea
  • Class Branchiopoda include brine shrimp and
    water fleas (Daphnia)
  • Class Ostracoda (ostracods) bivalved carapace
    many bioluminescent
  • Class Maxillopoda include copepods (planktonic
    and parasitic forms), fish lice, and barnacles
    (sessile or parasitic as adults)
  • Class Malacostraca most with hard carapace
    covering cephalothorax
  • Order Isopoda dorsoventrally flattened, lack
    carapace include pill bugs, rock lice,
    parasitic forms, and deep-sea forms (some of
    which exhibit gigantism)
  • Order Amphipoda laterally flattened lack
    carapace include kelp hoppers, skeleton
    shrimp, whale lice, and pelagic species (ex.
    Phronima)
  • Order Euphausiacea (krills) carapace fused to
    thoracic segments but gills partially exposed
    abundant prey in Southern Ocean for baleen
    whales, penguins, crabeater seals, and others
  • Order Decapoda crabs, shrimp, lobsters,
    crayfish often with chelae (pincers) support
    important fisheries (ex. Alaskan king crab)

19
Fig. 20.1
20
Fig. 20.14
21
Fig. 20.15
22
Fig. 20.16
23
(No Transcript)
24
Fig. 20.18
25
Fig. 20.21
26
Fig. 20.23
27
Fig. 20.24
28
Fig. 20.25
29
Fig. 20.26
30
Fig. 20.27
31
Fig. 20.28
32
The Crustaceans Structure and Development
  • Structure two pairs of antennae, biramous
    appendages
  • Serial homology and specialization of appendages
    (incl. mouthparts) decapods with five pairs of
    walking legs, abdominal swimmerets, and
    tail-like uropod
  • Gills in larger forms extend from appendages or
    are internal (water pumped into gill cavities
    via pumping of second maxillae)
  • Open circulatory system hemoglobin or hemocyanin
    (copper-based)
  • Sensory systems include statocysts, tactile
    hairs, and compound eyes
  • Development metamorphosis vs. direct development
  • Common larval stages include nauplius (with
    single medial eye), zoea (crabs), cyprid
    (barnacles), and phyllasoma (lobsters)
  • Molting cycle and ecdysis (shedding of cuticle)
    controlled by hormones
  • Cuticle is non-living, must be shed as grows
    growth occurs during intermolt phases until
    space filled, absorbed water splits old
    cuticle, animal stays sheltered until new
    cuticle hardens

33
Fig. 20.2
34
Fig. 20.3
35
Fig. 20.5
36
Fig. 20.10
37
Fig. 20.12
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