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Published byBeatrix Anna Davis Modified over 9 years ago
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Ch 28-2: Chelicerates - Spiders and Their Relatives
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Chelicerates Two-part body system Mouthparts called chelicerae Lack sensory “feelers” on head
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Two Part Body Cephalothorax - contains brain, eyes, mouth, beginnings of digestive system and several pairs of walking legs Abdomen – contains most of the internal organs
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Chelicerae Specialized appendages for eating In spiders, they are sharp for piercing the prey, and the poison glands empty through the ends
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Pedipalps A second pair of specialized appendages for eating In spiders, they act together with the chelicerae to puncture and hold the prey
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Wolf Spider
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Horseshoe Crabs NOT TRUE CRABS “living fossils” – have not changed since 430 mya Have book gills for respiration (unique to horseshoe crabs)
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Arachnids Spiders, scorpions, ticks and mites Have 4 pairs of walking legs on their cephalothorax Pedipalps capture/hold prey Chelicerae bite, poison, then suck out prey’s soft parts
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Spiders Usually eat small insects Capture prey in webs, or pouncing on them Hollow chelicerae inject venom to paralyze prey
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Digestive enzymes are injected into prey through wounds Pumping stomach sucks liquefied tissues into digestive system
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Momma wolf spider carries Her babies on their back until They can feed themselves
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Back to spiders If a yellow crab spider lays her eggs on a white- flowered plant, her offspring will be white, not yellow. Furthermore, if a white crab spider lays her eggs on a yellow-flowered plant her offspring will be yellow, not white.
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Silk All spiders can produce silk from gland in abdomen -liquid silk is forced through and pulled out of spinnerets - this silk is a flexible protein (5x stronger than steel) - Silk is used for webs, cocoons, wrapping prey
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Building webs is an innate behavior
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Internal Structures of the Spider
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Mites and Ticks Small Many are parasites Chelicerae and pedipalps may be modified to dig in and hold on to the prey Can also be spreaders of disease
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Engorged Ticks
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Mighty-mites
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Scorpions Live in warmer climes Carnivores (of mostly insects) Pedipalps modified into claws End of abdomen ha venomous barb to sting prey
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Pedipalps (claws) capture prey, then abdomen stinger kills or paralyzes it. Chelicerae are used as teeth to chew Most scorpion’s sting is like a wasp sting – one species is strong enough to kill a small child
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Crustaceans Most are aquatic - two pairs of antennae Hard exoskeleton- mouthparts called mandibles
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Main Structure Head, thorax and abdomen Some (crayfish and others) have cephalothorax covered in covered by tough shell called carapace
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Large crustaceans have calcium carbonate in their exoskeletons to make them stronger
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First two pairs of appendages are antennae (feelers) Have many sensory hairs on them Other crustaceans use their antannae for filter feeding or even as oars (water fleas)
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Third pair of appendages are mandibles (mouth parts) Often for biting and grinding food Some use mandibles for filter feeding, as feelers, or to suck blood from host
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Appendages on Thorax Barnacles have feathery appendages for filter feeding
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Some thorax appendages are used as legs Other are used for internal fertilization, carrying eggs, capturing prey, etc
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