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Chapter 28 Arthropods Section 2 Diversity of Arthropods
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Arachnids Class: Arachnida spiders, scorpions, mites and ticks Have only two body regions – a cephalothorax and an abdomen Do not have antennae Have six pairs of jointed appendages
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Arachnids Class: Arachnida Have six pairs of jointed appendages Chelicerae First pair of appendages Located near the mouth Often modified pincers (for holding food) or fangs (for injecting poison into prey) Pedipalps Second pair of appendages Adapted for handling food and for sensing Four remaining pairs of appendages are adapted for locomotion
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Arachnids Spiders Have extracellular digestion of food Lack mandibles for chewing, so… Digestive enzymes from the spider’s mouth liquefy the internal organs of the captured prey The liquefied food is then sucked up by the spider All spin silk Silk is secreted by silk glands in the abdomen Spun into thread by structures called spinnerets that are located at the rear of the spider
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Arachnids Ticks Have only one body section Feed on blood from reptiles, birds, and mammals Can expand to more than three times their original size after ingesting blood Can spread diseases
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Arachnids Mites Have only one body section Feed on fungi, plants, and animals Can often not be seen with the unaided eye (tiny) Can spread diseases
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Arachnids Scorpions Have many abdominal body segments and enlarged pincers Have a long tail with a venomous stinger at the tip Used to paralyze large prey Live in warm, dry climates Eat insects and spiders
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Crustaceans Class: Crustacea crabs, lobsters, shrimps, crayfishes, water fleas, pill bugs, and barnacles Only group of arthropods that have two pairs of antennae for sensing Have either 2 or 3 body sections Have mandibles that open and close from side to side in order to crush food Typically have two compound eyes that are often located on moveable stalks
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Crustaceans Class: Crustacea Many have 5 pairs of walking legs First pair of walking legs are often modified into strong claws for defense Other pairs can be used for walking, seizing prey, and cleaning Most are aquatic and use gills for gas exchange Sow bugs and pill bugs are terrestrial but must live in moist environments in order to carry out gas exchange
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Centipedes Class: Chilopoda centipedes Have flattened bodies Have Malpighian tubes for excreting wastes Have tracheal tubes Are carnivorous Eat soil arthropods, snails, slugs, and worms Bites can be painful to humans
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Millipedes Class: Diplopoda millipedes Have cylindrical bodies Have Malpighian tubes for excreting wastes Have tracheal tubes Eats mostly plants and dead materials on damp forest floors Do not bite but can spray foul-smelling fluids from defensive stink glands
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Horseshoe Crabs Class: Merostomata Horseshoe crabs Considered to be living fossils Have an extensive exoskeleton Live in deep coastal waters (currently off the east coast of North America or the Asian tropics) Forage on the ocean bottom for algae, annelids, and mollusks Migrate to shallow waters in the spring in order to mate at night
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Insects Class: Insecta insects Largest and most successful arthropod class There are more species of insects than all other classes of animals combined Have three body segments and six legs
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Insects Reproduction Most insects mate once during their lifetime Eggs are usually fertilized internally Although some insects can also be reproduce from non-fertilized eggs Many females are equipped with an appendage that can pierce through the surface of the ground or into wood in order to lay eggs A large number of eggs are laid in order to increase chances of offspring survival
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Insects Reproduction After eggs are laid, insect embryos develop and the eggs hatch Some wingless insects (such as silverfish) hatch directly into mini forms of the adult and then go through successive molts to reach the adult size Other insects hatch into forms that do not resemble the adult and most go through metamorphosis - a series of changes that are controlled by chemical substances in the animal
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Insects Complete Metamorphosis Includes four stages : egg, larva, pupa, and adult Undergone by more than 90% of insects Advantageous because adults and larva do not compete for the same food source Stages: Embryo (Egg) Larva Free-living, wormlike stage (caterpillar) As the larva eats and grows it molts several times Pupa Period of reorganization in which the tissues and organs of the larva are broken down and replaced by adult tissues Usually the insect does not move or feed during this time Adult
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Insects Incomplete Metamorphosis Includes only three stages of development: egg, nymph, and adult The nymph has the same general appearance as the adult but is smaller, may lack or have appendages seen/not seen in the adults, and cannot reproduce As the nymph eats and grows it molts several times, becoming more like the adult with each molt
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Success of Arthropods Why are arthropods so successful? Have varied life cycles, high reproductive output, and many structural adaptations such as small size, hard exoskeleton, and jointed appendages
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Origins of Arthropods How do we know about the origin of arthropods? Insects have many hard parts that fossilize easily What do we know about the origin of arthropods? Most likely evolved from an ancestor of the annelids (segmented worms) As arthropods evolved body segments fused and became adapted for specific function
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