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Insects were a winning combination. Insects cause hugh economic losses (but a lot of benefits, as well) each yearThey are the dominant group of animals on the earth todayThe diversity of insects is far greater than all other taxa combinedThere are an estimated 200 million insects alive for every
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1. Arthropods
2. Insects were a winning combination Insects cause hugh economic losses (but a lot of benefits, as well) each year
They are the dominant group of animals on the earth today
The diversity of insects is far greater than all other taxa combined
There are an estimated 200 million insects alive for every human today
3. Characteristics of Arthropoda Arthropods includes spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, crustaceans, millipedes, centipedes, insects, and some smaller groups as well
There is a rich fossil record extending back to the mid-Cambrian period
4. Characteristics Arthropods have a well-developed organ system and a chintinized cuticular exoskeleton
Segments have coalesced into tagmata
They range in size from .1 mm to 13 feet!
Arthropods compete with us for food and spread disease; they also produce silk, honey, and beeswax
5. Ecological Relationships They are found in all environments and virtually all altitudes and latitudes
Species are adapted to land and to fresh, brackish, and marine water
Most species fly to their favored habitats
All modes of feeding occur among arthropods though the majority are herbivorous
Nothing else matches their divesity
6. Characteristics of the arthropoda An exoskeleton with a cuticle that is highly protective but is jointed, providing mobility
Both layers of the cuticle contain chitin bound with protein
Chitin is a tough resistant polysaccharide insoluble in water
7. Characteristics of the arthropoda Terrestrial arthropods use an efficient tracheal system that delivers oxygen directly to cells
Aquatic arthropods respire by various forms of efficient gills
Arthropods have highly developed sensory organs
Sensory organs vary from a compound mosaic eye to other senses of touch, smell, hearing, balancing and chemical reception
9. Segmentation and Appendages Each segment usually has a pair of jointed appendages
Segments and appendages are modified for various adaptive functions
Appendages may function in sensing, food handling, walking or swimming
10. Characteristics of the arthropoda As the cuticle is thin between segments, it allows movement at the joints
Muscles attach to the cuticle
The cuticle also folds inward to line the foregut, hindgut, and the trachea
Ecdysis, or molting, is the process of shedding its outer exoskeleton
Arthropods usually molt 4 to 7 times; the weight of the exoskeleton limits their body size
11. Taxonomy of the arthropods There are four subphyla:
Trilobita
Chelicerata
Crustacea
Uniramia
12. Subphylum Trilobita Trilobita arose before the Cambrian, flourished, and then became extinct 250 million years ago
They have a trilobed body shape due to a pair of longitudinal grooves
They were bottom dwellers and probably were scavengers
They ranged from an inch to 20 inches or more and could roll up like pill bugs
13. Subphylum Chelicerata Include the horseshoe crabs, spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions, and sea spiders
Chelicerates have six pairs of appendages including chelicerae, pedipalps and four pair of legs
They lack mandibles and antennae
Most suck liquid food from prey
14. Class Merostomata Includes the modern horeshoe crab; Limulus polyphemus
This species is nearly unchanged from its Cambrian ancestors
Five species in three genera survive
15. The Horseshoe Crab Most live in shallow water
They have an unsegmented carapace that covers the body in front of a broad abdomen
A telson or spinelike tail
Book gills are exposed on some of the abdominal appendages
They walk with their walking legs and swim with abdominal plates
They feed at night on worms and small molluscs
16. Class Pycnogonidathe sea spiders They vary from a few millimeters to centimeters; all have small, thin bodies
Some males use legs to carry developing eggs
The mouth at the tip of a proboscis, drinks juices from cnidarians (hydroids) and soft-bodied animals
They have a greatly reduced abdomen attached to an elongated cephalothorax
17. Class Arachnida Consists of a great diversity among scorpions, mites, ticks, daddy longlegs and others
Of 80,000 species, most are free living and more common in warm, dry regions
Arachnids are dived into a cephalothorax and abdomen
18. Order Araneaethe spiders About 40,000 species of spiders are known
The body consists of an unsegmented cephalothorax and abdomen joined by a slender pedicel
19. Order Araneaethe spiders The anterior appendages are a pair of chelicerae with terminal fangs
All spiders are predaceous, mostly on insects, which are killed b poison and fangs
The injected venom liquefies and digests the tissues which are then sucked into the spider’s stomach
Spiders breath by book lungs and/or trachae
20. Characteristics of the spiders Book lungs are found only in the spiders; parallel air pockets extend into a blood-filled chamber
Air enters the chamber through a slit in the body wall
The tracheae system is less extensive than in insects; it carries air directly to tissues
Spiracles are openings to the trachea
Most spiders have eight simple eyes, each with a lens, optic rods and a retina
They detect movement and may for images
Sensory setae detect air currents, web vibrations, and other stimuli
21. Web-spinning Habits Spinning silk is a critical ability for spiders and some other arachnids
Two or three pairs of spinnerets contain microscopic tubes that run to silk glands
A liquid protein secretion hardens as it is extruded from the spinnerets
Silk threads are very strong and will stretch considerably before breaking
Spiders are often camouflaged or cryptic
22. Web-spinning Habits Jumping spiders (Salticidae) have excellent vision and stalk their prey
Silk is used for orb webs, lining burrows, forming egg sacs, and wrapping prey
Wolf spiders, jumping spiders, and fisher spiders chase and catch their prey
23. Spider Diversity
24. Reproduction in spiders Males court females before mating
The male spins a small web, deposits a drop of sperm on it, and then stores the package in his pedipalp
Mating involves inserting the pedipalps into the female genital openings and depositing the spermatophore
Sperm are stored in a seminal receptacle for weeks or months until the eggs are ready
Eggs may develop in a cocoon in the web or may be carried by the female
The young hatch in a few weeks and may molt before leaving the cocoon
25. Venomous spiders Most are feared for no reason at all
Spiders help to control the populations of insects
American tarantulas rarely bite and the bite is not dangerous
The black widow (Lactrodectus mactans) however, can be fatal
The venom is neurotoxic
The brown recluse spider, Loxosceles recluse, has hemolytic venom that destroys tissue around the bite
Some Australian and South American Spiders are the most dangerous and aggressive
26. Order Scorpionida: Scorpions More common in tropical and subtropical (such as Florida!) zones but do occur in temperate areas
They are nocturnal and feed largely on insects and spiders
The short cephalothorax has the appendages and 1 to 6 pair of eyes
The postabdomen has the long slender tail of five segments that end in a stinging apparatus
Scorpions bear live young carried on the mothers back
27. Order Opiliones: Harvestmen Harvestmen or Daddy longlegs are common, especially in tropical areas
Unlike spiders, their abdomen and cephalothorax join broadly without a narrow pedicel
They can lose one or mor legs of their eight legs without ill effect
Their chelicerae are pincer-like and they feed more as scavengers than do spiders
28. Order Acari: Ticks and Mites They are medically and economically the most important arachnids
Their mouthparts are on the tip of the anterior capitulum
They are both aquatic and terrestrial; some parasitize vertebrates and invertebrates
About 40,000 species have been described; many more are estimated to exist
29. Diversity of mites and ticks House mites are free-living and cause allergies
Spider mites are one of the many important agricultural pest mites that suck out plant nutrients
Chiggers are larval Trombicula mites; they feed on dermal tissues and cause skin irritation
The hair follicle mite Demodex is harmless but related species cause mange in domestic animals
Ticks are usually larger than mites
Tick species of Ixodes carry Lyme disease
Tick species of Dermacentor transmit Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
The cattle tick transmits Texas cattle fever
30. Diversity of Mites and Ticks
31. Subphylum Myriapoda Includes the centipedes, millipedes, pauropods and symphylans
Several classes have two tagmata – a head and trunk with paired appendages on the trunk
Myriapods only have one pair of antennae, mandibles, and maxillae
Legs are always uniramous
Respiration occurs through the body surface, trachea, or gills in juveniles
32. Class Chilopoda: Centipedes Centipedes are terrestrial carnivorous predators found under logs, bark and stones eating earthworms, cockroaches and other insects
Their flattened bodies have up to 177 segments
33. Class Chilopoda: Centipedes Each segment, except the one behind the head and the last two, bears a pair of appendages
Appendages of the first body segment form venom claws
The head has a pair of eyes on either side of the head that consist of groups of ocelli
A pair of spiracles in each segment allows air to diffuse through branched air tubes of the trachae
The sexes ar separate; all are oviparous and the young resemble the adults
One genus of house centipede has 15 pairs of legs and another has 21 pairs
Most are harmless to humans but a few large, tropical centipedes are dangerous
34. Class Diplopoda Millipedes have many legs, but not a thousand as they are sometimes called
Their cylindrical bodies have from 25 to 100 segments
Two pairs of legs are present per segment, probably from the fusion of two segments
Each abdominal segment has two pair of spiracles opening into air chambers and tracheal air tubes
Most eat decayed plants but a few eat living plant tissue
After copulation, the female lays eggs in a nest and guards them
Larvae have only one pair of legs to each segment
35. Millipedes
36. Subpylum Crustacea 67,000 species include lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, crabs, and copepods
Most are aquatic, and free living, many are sessile, commensal, or parasitic
The main distinguishing characteristic of crustaceans is that they have two pairs of antennae
The head also has a pair of mandibles and two pair of maxillae
37. Typical Body Plan
38. Subphylum Crustacea There is one pair of appendages on each of the additional segments; some segments lack appendages
All appendages, except perhaps the first antennae, are biramous with two main branches
Primitive crustaceans may have up to 60 segments; modern crustaceans have 16-20
The tagmata are usually head, thorax and abdomen
The dorsal covering is the carapace; it may cover most of the body or just the cephalothorax
39. Form and Function of Crustacea Crayfish and lobsters show modifications to their appendages
Swimmerets retain the primitive biramous condition and consist of an endopod and exopod which are attached to one or more basal segments collectively called a protopod
40. Form and Function of Crustacea Crayfish appendages have evolved into walking legs, mouthparts, swimmerets, etc from modification of the basic biramous appendage
The evolutionary trend is reduction and modification of appendages
Three pairs of thoracic appendages are called maxillipeds; the first pair of walking legs are called chelipeds, and the last pair of appendages are called uropods
41. Form and Function of Crustacea Abdominal swimmerets are used in locomotion, the first pair are named gonopods
Gonopods in males are modified for copulation; females attach eggs and young to them
Uropods serve as paddles for swift backward movement
The telson also protects eggs and young on the swimmerets
42. External Structure of Crayfish
43. Important Internal Features Major body space is a blood-filled hemocoel
Muscular and nervous sysems show the metamerism of annelid-like ancestors
Most muscles are antagonistic; flexors draw a limb toward the body and extensors straighten a limb out
Abdominal flexors of a crayfish allow it to swim backward
Strong muscles located on each side of the stomach control the mandables
44. The molting process Molting is necessary for a crustacean to increase in size; the exoskeleton does not grow
The physiology of molting affects reproduction, behavior and many metabolic processes
Inorganic salts are withdrawn from the old cuticle during premolt
The underlying epidermis secretes the cuticle
Enzymes released into the area above the new epicuticle dissolve the old endocuticle
The animal then swallows water or air to expand and burst the old cuticle
The new soft cuticle stretches and then hardens with the deposition of inorganic salts during postmolt
Molting occurs often in young animals and may cease in adults
Temperature or day length may trigger molting
45. Ecdysis or Molting
46. Molting sequence of a lobster
47. Feeding Habits Many crustaceans shift from one type of feeding to another, depending on food availability
The same fundamental mouthparts are adapted to a wide array of food availability
Mandibles and maxillae ingest food; maxillipeds hold and crush food
Suspension feeders generate water currents in order to eat plankton, detritus and bacteria
Predators consume larvae, worms, crustaceans, snails and fishes
48. Feeding Habits The shrimp-like Lygiosquilla pierces prey with a specialized digit on a walking leg
The pistol shrimp Alpheus catches prey with a large chela that snaps shut
Scavengers eat dead animal and plant matter
Crayfishes have a two-part stomach; a gastric mill grinds up food in the first compartment
49. Internal anatomy of crustaceans Gills that vary in shape
Excretory and osmoregulatory organs are located in the head
Decapods have antennal glands called green glands
Waste products consist of ammonia with some urea and uric acid
Crustaceans and other arthropods have an open circulatory system; there is no system of veins to separate blood from interstitial fluid
50. Internal anatomy of crustaceans Movement of organs and limbs circulate blood in the open sinuses
Hemocyanin and hemoglobin are respiratory pigments; clotting also occurs
There is a brain with a double ventral nerve cord
A median eye and compound eyes are present
The median eye consists of three pigment cups, retinal cells, and possible a lens
Crustacean compound eyes are similar to insect eyes
Attached to moveable stalks, compound eyes detect motion and analyze polarized lights
Statocysts, tactile setae, and chemosensitive setae are also present
51. Reproduction and Life Cycles Crustaceans have separate sexes with specializations for copulation
Almost all barnacles are monecious but generally cross-fertilize
In some ostracods, males are scarce and reproduction is by parthenogenesis
Most crustaceans brood eggs in brood chambers, in brood sacs attached to the abdomen, or attached to abdominal appendages
Crayfish develop directly without a larval form
Most crustaceans have a larva unlike the adult in form, and under metamorphis
The Nauplius is a common larval form
52. Life Cycle of Gulf Shrimp
53. Brief Survey of Crustaceans Ostracods are enclosed in a bivalve carapace and resemble tiny clams and are less than 1/16 inch long
Most live in marine or freshwater sediments but some scavenge or feed on detritus
54. Copepods have numerous species
They lack a carapace and retain the simple, median eye in the adult
They have four pairs of flattened, biramous, thoracic swimming appendages
Free-living copepods may be the dominant primary consumer in aquatic communities
Parasitic forms are highly modified and reduced, often unrecognizable as arthropods
55. Brachiurans lack gills and most are parasites of fish
Found on both marine and freshlwater fish
56. Cirripedia – the barnacles Barnacles as adults are sessile and attach directly or by a stalk to the substrate
The carapace surrounds the body and secretes a set of calcareous plates
The head is reduced, the abdomen is absent and the thoracic legs are long with hair-like setae
The many-jointed cirri that bear the setae are extended from the plates to feed on small particles
57. The barnacle
58. Isopods are dorsoventrally flattened, lack a carapace and have sessile compound eyes
The abdominal appendages bear gills
Common land forms include the sow bugs and pill bugs
Some isopods are highly modified as parasites of fish or crustaceans
59. Amphipods resemble isopods except they are somewhat compressed laterally
They lack a carapace and have sessile compound eyes
Many are marine, others are beach-dwelling, freshwater or parasitic
60. Euphausiacids or “Krill” has only 90 species but includes the important ocean plankton called krill
They form a major component of the diet of baleen whales and of many fishes.
Some are over 2 inches long
61. Decapods have five pairs of walking legs, the first forming pincers or chelae
They range from a few millimeters to the larges arthropod, a Japanese crab with a 12 foot leg-span
They are true crabs with a broader cephalothorax and reduce abdomen, compared to crayfish or lobsters
Fiddler crabs have a reduced abdomen and burrow in the sand
Hermit crabs are adapted to live in snail shells
62. Variety of Decapods