Title: Chapter 14 Phylum Arthropoda
1Chapter 14- Phylum Arthropoda
2Phylum Arthropoda Facts
- Arthropods inhabit virtually every environment on
earth - Includes
- Crayfish
- Lobsters
- Spiders
- Scorpions
- Insects
- Considered to be the most successful animal group
- More than 1 million known species (6-9 million
est.)
3Phylum Arthropoda Characteristics
- Microscopic to 12 ft length (King Crab)
- Jointed appendages- Structures extending from
body wall - Bilaterally symmetrical
- Evolutionary links to annelids
- Many are toxic
- Many vector (transmit) pathogens
- Many beneficial
4Phylum Arthropoda
- Rigid exoskeleton for support and protection
- Molting occurs during growth
- Paired, jointed appendages
- Ventral nervous system (ventral nerve cord)
- Reduced coelom
- Open circulatory system
- Complete digestive tract
- Malpighian tubules- Excretory units
- Respiration through tracheae (network of fine
tubes) and spiracles (structures where air
enters) - Metamorphosis often occurs during development
5Arthropod Metamorphosis
- Metamorphosis radical change in body form
- Complete Metamorphosis- Includes pupa stage
- Incomplete metamorphosis- No pupa stage
- Results in reduced competition between immature
forms and adults - Eat different food
- Occupy different habitats
- Example caterpillar vs. butterfly
6Metamorphosis
7Arthropod Exoskeleton
- Secreted by the epidermis
- Functions
- Support http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzXhdr0T
pOwYBack to results - Protection
- Prevent water loss
- Muscle attachment/movement
- Two layers
- Epicuticle (outside) waxy, impermeable to
water - Procuticle chitin
- Must be shed to allow growth (molt)
8Subphylum Trilobitomorpha
- Trilobites inhabited Earths oceans from
- 600 mya 345 mya are now extinct
- Body oval flattened _ divided into three
segments (longitudinal) - Rolled into a ball for protection
9Phylum Arthropoda- Living Subphyla
- Hexapoda
- Class Insecta
- Myriapoda
- Class Diploda
- Class Chilopoda
- Crustacea
- Class Remipedia
- Class Cephalocarida
- Class Branchiopoda
- Class Malacostraca (Orders Decapoda and Isopoda)
- Class Maxillopoda
- Chelicerata
- Class Arachnida (Orders Scorpions, Acari, and
Araneae) - Class Merostomata
- Class Pycnogonida
10Phylum Arthropoda
- 2 minor classes
- Class Merostomata- Horseshoe crabs
- Class Pycnogonida- Sea spiders
- 5 major classes
- Chilopoda centipedes
- Diplopoda millipedes
- Malacotsraca crabs, lobster, crayfish,shrimp
- Insecta insects
- Arachnida spiders, scorpions, mites, chiggers
11Classification of Arthropods
- Centipedes 1 pr legs/segment
- Millipedes 2 prs legs/segment
- Crustaceans 5 pairs of legs
- Insects 3 pairs of legs
- Arachnids 4 pairs of legs
12Subphylum Myriapoda- Class Chilopoda
- Centipedes
- 100 leggers
- Flattened worm like w/1 pr legs/seg
- Carnivores
- Possess a pair of poison claws or legs just
behind the head which are used to paralyze their
prey - Feed on insects or small animals
- Most centipedes are beneficial
- Large species found in the tropics (length of up
to 18 inches) - Can inflict painful bites
13Subphylum Myriapoda- Class Chilopoda
14Subphylum Myriapoda- Class Diplopoda
- 1000 leggers
- Cylindrical worm like with 2/prs legs/seg
- Decomposers or herbivores
- gt1000 species in US
- Short antenna
- Non-toxic
15Subphylum Myriapoda- Class Diplopoda
16Subphylum Myriapoda- Millipedes and Centipedes
- Life Cycle
- Millipede eggs are deposited in masses in the
soil. - Young millipedes have fewer segments than the
adult, but they add segments at each molt of the
outer shell, or exoskeleton. - Molting occurs 7-10 times before maturity.
- Young millipedes mature the second year after
hatching. - Some species may live for several years.
- Similarly, centipedes molt several times, adding
legs and body segments with each molt
17Subphylum Crustacea
- Body segmented with hardened Limbs
- Limbs generally with two branches
- Two pairs of antennae
- Two compound eyes (eyes with many lenses)
- Body with 7 or more pairs of sometimes very
different appendages for feeding, locomotion and
sex - Respiration by gills
- Nauplius- Distinctive larval stage with three
pairs of branched appendages - Although originally aquatic, many crustaceans are
adapted to life on land
18Subphylum Crustacea
- Shrimp
- Lobster
- Krill
- Pill bug
- Crabs
- Crayfish
- Barnacles (sessile)
19Subphylum Crustacea- Class Remipedia
- Cave-dwelling
- 30 segments with uniform, biramous appendages
- Carribean, Indian Ocean, Canary Islands, Australia
20Subphylum Crustacea
http//www.youtube.com/watch?veKPrGxB1Kzc
21Subphylum Crustacea- Class Cephalocarida
- Small and marine
- Uniform, leaflike triramous appendages
22Subphylum Crustacea- Class Branchiopoda
- Freshwater mostly
- Leaflike appendages for respiration, filter
feeding and locomotion - Fairy, brine and clam shrimp and water fleas
23Subphylum Crustacea- Class Maxillopoda
- Five head, six thoracic, and four abdominal
somites with a telson - Variously fused segments
- No appendages on reduced abdomen
- Barnacles and copepods
24Subphylum Crustacea- Class Malacostraca
- Modified appendages for crawling, feeding or
swimming - Lobsters, crayfish, crabs, shrimp, and isopods
25Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- gt750,000 species
- Upwards of 3 million species
- Outnumber all other plant and animal groups
- Found in all environments
- 10,000 ft. high
- Some fly 100s of KM per week
26Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- Three body divisions
- Head
- Thorax
- Abdomen
- Exoskeleton
- 12 InchesLargest
- 1MM-Smallest
- Rapid growth rate
- Exponential
- Most mature lt 1 year
- Display almost every color
27Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- Open circulatory system
- Spiracles along abdomen used for breathing
- Highly modified mouth parts (mandibles)
- Some beetles can chew through lead or zinc
- Well developed tube within a tube digestive
system - Well developed nervous system
- Sight- two types of eyes
- Smell/taste-Use of antennae and feet
- Hearing- tympanum (eardrum)
28Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- Pheromones- External hormones used for
communication (especially in finding mates)
29Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- gt390 million years old
- Coevolved with plants (Especially flowering
plants) - 1st insects were flightless
30Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- Entomology- Study of insects and other arthropods
- Helpful or harmful
- Helpful insects
- Pollinators
- Research and discovery- fruit fly for genetic
research - Food producers- honey
- Textiles- Silk beeswax
- Biological control agents
31Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta
- Harmful insects
- Disease vectors
- Crop/food destruction
- Textile destruction
32Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta Morphology
- Mimicry- Resemble something you are not in order
to survive - Protective resemblance
33Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta Hierarchy
- Ants, termites, hornets, wasps, and some bees
- Social hierarchy
- Caste system
- King and queen
- Large number of individuals function as one unit
- Division of labor
- Physical appearance of individuals depends on
their caste placement
34Subphylum Hexapoda- Class Insecta Hierarchy
35Subphylum Chelicerata- Class Arachnida
- Spiders
- Mites/ticks
- Scorpions
36Subphylum Chelicerata- Order Araneae
- Most familiar spiders
- Cephalothorax (head fused to thorax)and abdomen
- All toxic
- No antennae
- Use pedipalps ( 2nd pair of appendages modified
to catch and handle prey) and walking legs as
sensory organs - gt30,000 Species/3,000 in U.S.
- Tarantulas largest
- Body 2.5 in, legs 9-10 in.
- Many, but not all spiders web builders
- Spinneretes- Appendages that secrete silk)
- Liquid feeders
- Inject digestive enzymes into prey and drink
juices - Use powerful jaws to crush exoskeleton- then
digest and eat
37Subphylum Chelicerata- Class ArachnidaOrder -
Araneae
http//www.asterpix.com/console/?avi10313601
38Subphylum Chelicerata- Class Arachnida
- Order Scorpions
- Tropical and subtropical
- 0.5 to 8 IN.
- Stinger on end of tail
- Pedipalps are pinchers
- Nocturnal
- Can be deadly but many arent
- One of the oldest forms of life on Earth
39Other Arachnids
- Order Acari
- Ticks, mites, and chiggers
- Found everywhere
- Omnivorous/scavengers/parasites
- Many blood feeders
- Disease vectors
- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Lyme Disease
40Other Chelicerates
- Class Merostomata-
- Subclass Xiphosura- Horseshoe crabs (Limulus)
- Marine with book gills
- Not actually crabs
- Shallow water on Atlantic coast
- Feed on worms, bivalves, and small animals
- Subclass Eurypterida- Extinct giant water
scorpions - Class Pycnogonida- Sea spiders
- Reduced abdomen
- No special respiratory/excretory organs
- Four to six pairs of legs
41Class Merostomata
42Class Pycnogonida