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Arthropods and Echinoderms

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Title: Arthropods and Echinoderms


1
Arthropods and Echinoderms
  • Biology I Chapter 28

2
ARTHROPODS
3
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Arthropods
  • Phylum Arthropoda
  • Insects, crabs, centipedes, spiders
  • Segmented body
  • Tough exoskeleton made of chitin
  • Jointed appendages

5
Evolution of Arthropods
  • Fewer body segments
  • Highly specialized appendages for feeding,
    movement and other functions

6
Form and Function in Arthropods
  • Complex organ systems some only found only in
    this phylum
  • Tracheal tubes (respiration)
  • Open circulatory system
  • Excrete wastes through saclike tubules

7
Feeding
  • Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, bloodsuckers,
    filter feeders, detritivores, and parasites
  • Mouthparts have evolved to allow them to eat
    anything imaginable
  • Pincers or fangs to sickle-shaped jaws that can
    cut through the tissues of captured prey

8
Respiration Terrestrial Arthropods
  • Tracheal tube one of many branching, air-filled
    tubes that extend throughout the body
  • Spiracle small opening located along the side of
    the body through which air enters and leaves the
    body
  • Book lung organ that has layers of respiratory
    tissue stacked like the pages of a book used to
    exchange gases

9
Respiration Aquatic Arthropods
  • Respire through feather-like gills (i.e. lobster
    and crabs)
  • The horseshoe crab respires through organs book
    gills

10
Circulation
  • Open circulatory system
  • Well-developed heart pumps blood through arteries
    that branch and enter the tissues
  • Blood leaves the blood vessels and moves through
    sinuses, or cavities
  • The blood recollects in a large sinus surrounding
    the heart
  • It reenters the heart and is again pumped
    throughout the body

11
Excretion
  • Terrestrial Arthropods
  • Malpighian tubules sac-like organ that extracts
    wastes from the blood and adds them to feces that
    move through the gut
  • Aquatic Arthropods
  • Diffusion moves cellular wastes from the
    arthropods body into the surrounding water

12
Response
  • Well-developed nervous system
  • Brain
  • Sophisticated sense organs, (i.e. eyes and taste
    receptors)

13
Movement
  • Well-developed groups of muscles that are
    coordinated and controlled by the nervous system
  • Allows arthropods to beat their wings against the
    air to fly, push their legs against the ground to
    walk, or beat their flippers against the water to
    swim

14
Reproduction
  • Terrestrial Arthropods
  • Internal fertilization
  • Sperm or sperm packet
  • Aquatic Arthropods
  • Internal or external fertilization

15
Growth and Development in Arthropods
  • Molting
  • As the time for molting approaches, skin glands
    digest the inner part of the exoskeleton and
    other glands secrete a new skeleton
  • The animal pulls itself out of the remains of the
    original skeletonthis can take several hours
  • The new exoskeleton is soft and the animal is
    vulnerable to predators

16
Groups of Arthropods
  • Classified based on the number and structure of
    their body segments and appendages-particularly
    their mouthparts
  • Crustaceans
  • Spiders and their relatives
  • Insects and their relatives

17
Crustaceans
  • 2 pairs of branched antennae
  • 2-3 body sections
  • Mandibles chewing mouthparts
  • Primarily aquatic
  • Examples Crabs, shrimps, lobsters, crayfishes,
    and barnacles
  • Range in size from small terrestrial pill bugs to
    spider crabs that have masses around 20 kg

18
Crustaceans
  • Cephalothorax region of a crustacean formed by
    the fusion of the head with the thorax
  • Thorax body part of crustacean that lies just
    behind the head and houses most of the internal
    organs
  • Abdomen posterior part of an arthropods body

19
Crustaceans
  • Carapace the part of the exoskeleton that covers
    the cephalothorax
  • Mandible mouthpart adapted for biting and
    grinding food
  • Cheliped one of the first pair of legs of
    decapods (five pairs of legs crayfishes,
    lobsters and crabs)
  • Swimmerets flipper-like appendages used by
    decapods for swimming

20
Spiders and Their Relatives
  • Chelicerates
  • Mouthparts chelicerae
  • 2 body sections
  • 4 pairs of walking legs
  • Horseshoe crabs, spiders, ticks, and scorpions

21
Horseshoe Crabs
  • The oldest living arthropods
  • First appeared more than
    500 mya and have changed
    little since that
    time
  • Not true crabs at all! Anatomy
    is closer to that of spiders
  • Chelicerae, five pairs of walking legs, a long
    spike-like tail used for movement

22
Arachnids Spiders
  • The largest group of arachnids
  • Spin webs of a strong, flexible protein called
    silk
  • Do not have jaws for chewing must liquefy food
    to swallow it

23
Arachnids Spiders
  • Chelicerae pair of mouthparts in chelicerates
    that contain fangs and are used to stab and
    paralyze prey
  • Pedipalps pair of mouthparts in chelicerates
    that are usually modified to grab prey
  • Spinneret organ in spiders that contains silk
    glands

24
Arachnids Mites and Ticks
  • Small arachnids that are usually parasitic
  • Chelicerae and pedipalps are
    specialized for digging into a
    hosts tissues and
    sucking out blood
    or plant fluids
  • Mouthparts are so strong that if you try to pull
    off a tick the cephalothorax may separate from
    the abdomen and remain in your skin

25
Arachnids Scorpions
  • Widespread in warm areas around the world
  • Have pedipalps that are
    enlarged into claws
  • The long, segmented
    abdomen of a scorpion
    carries a venomous
    stinger that
    can kill or paralyze prey
  • Chew their prey using their chelicerae

26
Insects and Their Relatives
  • Uniramians have jaws, one pair of antennae, and
    unbranched appendages
  • A group that contains more species than any other
    group of animals living today
  • Wide variety of
    forms and lifestyles
  • Centipedes
  • Millipedes

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Insects
  • Have a body divided into three parts
  • Head
  • Thorax
  • Abdomen
  • Three pairs of legs are attached to the thorax
  • Like all arthropods, insects have a segmented
    body, exoskeleton, and jointed appendages

29
Responses to Stimuli
  • Multiple of sense organs are used to respond to
    stimuli
  • Compound eyes
  • Chemical receptors for taste and smell on their
    mouthparts
  • Well-developed ears that hear sounds far above
    the human range

30
Adaptations for Feeding
  • Three pairs of appendages that are used as
    mouthparts, including a pair of mandibles
  • Adaptations for
    feeding are not
    restricted to
    their
    mouthparts
  • Many produce saliva containing digestive enzymes
    that help break down food

31
Movement and Flight
  • 3 pairs of legs
  • Used for walking, jumping, flying, capturing and
    holding prey, etc.
  • The evolution of flight has allowed insects to
    disperse long distances and to colonize a wide
    variety of habitats

32
Metamorphosis
  • Incomplete metamorphosis type of insect
    development characterized by a similar appearance
    throughout all stages of the life cycle
  • Nymph immature form that lacks functional sex
    organs and other adult structures

33
Metamorphosis
  • Complete metamorphosis type of insect
    development in which the larvae look and act
    nothing like their parents and also feed in
    completely different ways
  • Pupa stage of
    metamorphosis in
    which an
    insect
    changes from a
    larva into an
    adult

34
Insects and Humans
  • Many insects are known for their negative effects
  • Termites destroy wood structures, moths eat their
    way through wool clothing, etc.
  • Despite their association with destruction and
    disease, insects contribute to agriculture by
    pollinating 1/3 of the food that you eat
  • Produce commercially valuable silk, wax and honey

35
Insect Communication
  • Communicate using sound, visual, chemical, and
    other types of signals
  • Much of the communication involves finding a mate
  • Pheromones specific chemical messengers that
    affect the behavior of development of other
    individuals of the same species

36
Insect Societies
  • Ants, bees, termites, and some of their relatives
    form complex associations called societies
  • Society a group of closely related animals of
    the same species that work together for the
    benefit of the whole group
  • Caste group of individual insects specialized to
    perform particular tasks, or roles

37
ECHINODERMS
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Echinoderms
  • Phylum Echinodermata
  • Live only in the sea
  • Spiny skin
  • Water vascular system
  • Tube feet suction-cuplike structures
  • Endoskeleton internal skeleton hardened plates
    of calcium carbonate
  • Five-part radial symmetry

40
Form and Function in Echinoderms
  • The water vascular system, which is filled with
    fluid, carries out many essential body functions
    in echinoderms including respiration,
    circulation, and movement
  • Madreporite sieve-like structure
    through which the water vascular
    system of an
    echinoderm opens to
    the outside

41
Feeding
  • Several methods of feeding
  • Sea urchins use five-part
    jaw-like structures to scrape
    algae from rocks
  • Sea lilies use tube feet to
    capture floating plankton
  • Sea stars feed on mollusks by pushing the stomach
    out through the mouth

42
Respiration and Circulation
  • Other than the water vascular system, echinoderms
    have few adaptations to carry out respiration or
    circulation
  • In most species, the
    thin-walled tissue of
    the tube feet provides
    the main surface
    for respiration

43
Excretion
  • Solid wastes are released as feces through the
    anus
  • Nitrogen-containing cellular wastes are excreted
    primarily in the form of ammonia
  • It is passed through the tube feet and skin gills

44
Response
  • Do not have a highly developed nervous system
  • Most have a nerve ring that surrounds the mouth
    and radial nerves that connect the ring with the
    body sections
  • Most have scattered sensory cells that detect
    light, gravity, and chemicals released by
    potential prey

45
Movement
  • Most move by tube feet and thin layers of muscle
    fibers attached to their endoskeleton
  • Mobility is determined by the kind of endoskeleton

46
Reproduction
  • Reproduce by external fertilization
  • The sexes are separate in most sea star species

47
Groups of Echinoderms
  • 7000 species
  • Sea urchins and sand dollars
  • Brittle stars
  • Sea cucumbers
  • Sea stars
  • Sea lilies and feather stars

48
Ecology of Echinoderms
  • Common in a variety of marine habitats
  • A rise or fall of echinoderms can cause major
    changes to populations of other marine organisms
  • Sea urchins control the distribution of algae and
    other forms of marine life
  • Sea stars are important carnivores that control
    the numbers of other organisms such as clams and
    corals
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