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Published byCandice Cain Modified over 8 years ago
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Myriapoda and Hexapoda
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Characteristics n Enormously successful n 1 million + species n Many undescribed n 75% of all living species
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Characteristics n Insect dominance –Waxy epicuticle –Flight
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Sub Phylum Myriapoda n Four Classes n Two Body Tagmata –Head –Trunk –Uniramous appendages –Terrestrial
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Class Diplopoda n Class Diplopoda – Millipedes 11 to 100 trunk segments 2 appendages per trunk segment
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Class Diplopoda Most are round in shape Live all over the world Low level of wax on epicuticle
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Class Diplopoda Eat dead and decaying plant material (detritivores) Roll into a ball –Prevent desiccation –Defense
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Class Diplopoda Repugnatorial glands –Hydrogen Cyanide production Gain appendages and segments as they molt
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Class Chilopoda n Class Chilopoda –Centipedes Nocturnal One pair of appendages per trunk segment 15 or more segments
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Class Chilopoda Last pair of appendages are used as sensory appartus Flat body Eat small arthropods, earthworms, and snails or frogs and rodents
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Class Chilopoda Poison claws are modified first appendages Fast for their size Large tropical species can kill humans
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Class Pauropoda n Class Pauropoda –Soft bodied animals –11 segments –Feed on fungi and decaying plant matter
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Class Symphyla n Class Symphyla –Three tagmata –No eyes –12 segments with single pairs of legs
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Subphylum Hexapoda n Two Classes n Three Tagmata –Five head appendages –Three pairs of legs on each thorax
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Class Entognatha (springtails) n mouthparts are entognathous, meaning they are retracted within the head. n Entognatha are apterous, meaning they lack wings. n hexapodous condition of these animals has evolved independently from that of insects n Can live in arctic conditions
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Class Insecta n Class Insecta –Most successful land animals One pair of antenae Wings Three pairs of legs
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Class Insecta –External Structure Three tagmata –Head »Single pair of antennae »Compound eyes »Sometimes ocelli
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Class Insecta –Thorax »Three segments - prothorax, mesothorax, and metathorax »Wings with veins
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Class Insecta –Abdomen »10 to 11 segments »Lateral folds to allow for expansion »Spiracles lead to tracheal system
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Class Insecta – Flight Insects were the first animals to fly Wings are thought to have come from protective coverings
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Class Insecta Direct or synchronous flight –Grasshopper, butterflies, and dragonflies –Muscles at the base of wings and on the exoskeleton
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Class Insecta Indirect or asynchronous flight –Flies and wasps –Muscles change the shape of the exoskeleton »Fibillar flight muscles
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Class Insecta –Other Locomotion Walk, swim, run, or jump Cockroach reaches speeds of 5km/hr. Fleas can jump 100 times their size
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Class Insecta –Nutrition Three segment gut
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Class Insecta –Biting Mouthparts Labrum – upper lip –Sensory Mandible – Chewing (teeth) Maxillae – cutting surface, sensory Labrium – Sensory lower lip Hypopharynx – tongue- like structure –Grasshoppers
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Now these are some mandibles!
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Class Insecta Sucking Mouthparts –Mosquitoes
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Class Insecta n Sponging Mouthparts –Labellum – modified labium –Saliva is secreted –Mouth sponges up liquid Flies Essentially laps up slobber and digested food.
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Class Insecta – Gas Exchange Trachea open to spiracles Store bicarbonate Aquatic insects diffuse straight to water (gills)
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Class Insecta n Circulation –Open circulatory system –Amoeboid cells –Ectotherms or heterotherms Shivering Thermogenesis
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Class Insecta n Nervous –Similar to annelids –Some can learn –Setae and mechanoreceptors Johnston’s Organs— in antennae---motion Tympanal Organs--- hearing
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Class Insecta n Excretion –Malphigian tubules— waste removal –Uric acid
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Class Insecta n Chemical regulation –Controls many functions— Juvenile hormone/ –ecdysone –Pheromones
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Ecdysis or molting
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Class Insecta n Reproduction –Controlled by a number of factors Food, photoperiod, population density, temperature, and humidity –Indirect fertilization Silverfish and springtails
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Class Insecta n Metamorphosis »Ametabolous metamorphosis— no metamorphasis »Hemimetabolous metamorphosis- --partial metamorphosis --- egg--- nymph---adult »Holometabolous metamorphosis-- -whole metamorphosis egg--- larvae---pupa---adult
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Class Insecta – Insect Behavior Most innate Social qualities –Castes (soldier, worker, queen etc.)
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Class Insecta n Only 0.5% harmful to humans n 65% pollinate plants n Control qualities n Some parasitic –Lice, fleas
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