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Ch. 15 Notes The Arthropods: Part 2
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Phylum Arthropoda Review 5 Subphyla: 1.Trilobitomorpha – extinct – trilobites – Marine – Cambrian-Carboniferous time period 2.Chelicerata – spiders, mites, ticks, horseshoe crabs, sea spiders, scorpions 3.Crustacea – ‘hard shelled’ – crayfish, shrimp, lobster, crabs, water fleas, barnacles 4.Myriapoda – millipedes & centipedes 5.Hexapoda – ‘six legs’ – insects & their relatives
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Subphylum Myriapoda Class Diplopoda – two-fold foot – Millipedes – 11-100 trunk segments – Two pairs of appendages on each trunk segment – Actually the fusion of two segments 2 ostia – opening @ end of oviduct 2 ganglia 2 tracheal trunks – part of circulatory system – transports O 2 – Glands produce Hydrogen Cyanide to repel other animals – Round bodies in cross section
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Subphylum Myriapoda Class Chilopoda – lip foot – Centipedes – Nocturnal – Flattened bodies in cross section – Poison claws – Only 1 pair of appendages per segment – Add legs and segments with each molt
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Subphylum: Hexopoda Includes Insects & their relatives Body divided into 3 Tagmata: – Head, thorax, abdomen 5 pairs of head appendages 3 pairs of legs on the thorax (6 legs)
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Class Insecta Habitat: terrestrial, aquatic, & aerial – Insects are the most successful land animals
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Class Insecta Locomotion Flight is the most important form of locomotion – Insects were 1 st animals to fly – Must be able to thermoregulate Maintain body temperatures different from environment Walk/Run Jump Swim
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Class Insecta Thermoregulation Ectotherms – Most insects – Rely on sun or warm surface Heterotherms – Rely on metabolic heat – Shivering Thermogenesis Shivering Thermogenesis Generate heat by rapid contraction of flight muscles
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Class Insecta Digestive Tract Long & Straight 3 Regions – Foregut Musculary pharynx/oral cavity Used for sucking fluids Crop (storage) Gizzard (regulates movement to midgut; grinds food) – Midgut Surface for digestion & absorption – Hindgut The Intestine Reabsorption of Water
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Class Insecta Excretory System Nitrogenous wastes converted to uric acid – conserves water – energetically expensive Malpighian tubules transport uric acid to the digestive tract
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Class Insecta Respiration – a Simple System Have trachea- chitin lined tubes – Open to outside through spiracles – Oxygen diffuses from trachea to body tissues Aquatic insects – Spiracles are nonfunctional – Gasses diffuse across body wall Blood is not important for gas exchange in insects
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Class Insecta Do insects have blood? Circulatory System Open Circulatory System Less developed blood vessels Blood distributes nutrients, hormones, & wastes
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Pheromones – Chemicals released by one individual that affects the behavior of another – Chemoreceptors – pores through which chemicals diffuse Feeding Selection of egg laying sites Mate location Social organization
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Continued… Hormones regulate – Ecdysis – Metamorphosis Eclosion – the emergence of an insect from a cocoon, chrysalis, or puparium – Cocoon- Protective case enclosing the pupal stage, made of silk – Chrysalis- Last larval exoskeleton maintained during the pupal stage – Puparium- an outer covering that protects the pupae of some flies
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Continued… Insects are capable of memory Johnston’s organs – the base of the antennae of most insects – Long setae that vibrate when certain frequencies of sound strike them – Mosquitoes and fruit flies hear using the Johnston's organ
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Continued… Sense organs – Mechanoreceptors – perceive physical displacement of the body or body parts – Setae – distributed over mouthparts, antennae, legs Touch, air movements, and vibrations move setae – Stretch Receptors – located @ joints & muscles Monitor position and posture
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Continued… Sound Tympanic organs – Consist of a thin, membrane covering a large air sac – Air sac acts as a resonating chamber – Sensory cells under membrane to detect pressure waves
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Class Insecta Nervous Communication Continued… Sight All insects are capable of detecting light Compound Eyes – Well developed eyes – Not a very good image – Good at detecting movement – Sometimes can detect polarized light – Made up of 1000’s of Ommatidia Each is a lens w/ a crystaline cone Cells have a rhabdom light collecting area – Converts light energy into nerve impulses Ocelli – simple eyes – Hundreds of photo receptors
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Class Insecta Reproduction Adaptations for land – Resistant eggs – External genitalia – Behavioral mechanisms that bring males and females together at appropriate times Pheromones Visual signals Auditory signals
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Class Insecta Relationships Many insects are social – They live in colonies – Each kind of individual in an insect colony is called a caste Many are beneficial to humans Few are parasites or transmit diseases to humans or plants
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