Transcript Lab #12

Lab #12
Molluscs and Arthropods
Phylum Mollusca
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Class Scaphopoda (300 species)
– tooth shells, tusk shells
– all are burrowing marine animals
– most distinctive characteristic – conical shell open at both ends
Class Monoplacophora
– undivided arched shell
– flat foot
Class Caudofoveata
– wormlike molluscs
– live in vertical burrows on the deep sea floor
– lack a shell or a foot
Class Aplacophora (250 species)
– “solenogasters”
– lack a shell
– may be closely related to the flatworms
– most have a radula
– surface dwellers on corals
– carnivores
Class Gastropoda
• Gastropod diversity
– Subclass Prosobranchia (gill in front of heart): marine snails and abalone
• largest group
• 20,000 species, mostly marine
• few are freshwater and terrestrial
• most are herbivores or deposit feeders
• some are carnivorous – inject venom into their prey (fishes, other
molluscs or annelids) using a modified radula that is shaped like a
harpoon
abalone
Class Gastropoda
• Gastropod diversity
– Subclass Opisthobranchia (gill in back of heart): sea hares, sea slugs
• mostly marine
• fewer than 2,000 species
• shell, mantle cavity and gills are reduced or may be lost in this group
• many species have nematocysts – acquire these from their cnidarian prey
• foot may be modified for swimming
Class Gastropoda
• Gastropod diversity
– Subclass Pulmonata
• 17,000 species
• most are freshwater and terrestrial – snails and slugs
• mostly herbivores
• long radula for scraping plant material
• mantle cavity is highly vascular and serves as a lung – open to the air
via a pneumostome
Subclass Pulmonata
Class Bivalvia = the Clam
labial
palps
anterior
adductor
muscle
foot
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKTl5kwtj
Mc
mantle
http://iweb.tntech.edu/mcaprio/clam.htm
Class Cephalopoda = the squid
http://blog.tepapa.govt.nz/2008/04/29/dissection-of-giant-squid/
Phylum Arthropoda
• Subphylum Chelicerata: body divided into a
prosoma and an opisthosoma; first pair of
appendages are pincer-like and used for feeding
– Class Merostomata – horseshoe crabs
– Class Arachnida – scorpions, spiders, daddy long legs,
mites & ticks
– Class Pycnogonida – sea spiders
• Order Scorpionida: scorpions
Subphylum
– tropical to desert climates
Chelicerata
– are secretive and nocturnal
– distinctive chelicerae that surround the mouth + a pair of Class Arachnida
chelate pedipalps
– opisthoma is divided into a pre-abdomen and a postabdomen (called the tail) – curves dorsally and anteriorly
only a few scorpions
over the pre-abdomen when aroused
are toxic to humans
– Androctonus
– tip of the tial is the telson with a sting – bulbular base that
(northern Africa)
contains venom-producing glands and a hollow, sharp barb
- Centuroides
(Mexico, Arizona
and New Mexico)
chelicerae
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reproduction involves a complicated
“dance” that lasts several hours
development of a scorpion requires 1.5
years until maturity
• Order Opiliones: daddy long legs or harvestman
– body appears ovoid (unlike a spider)
– many are omnivorous as opposed to carnivorous spiders
Class Arachnida
• Order Acarina: mites and ticks
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great impact on human health and welfare
free-living forms are herbivores or scavengers – damage to crops
parasitic forms feed on blood and tissue fluids
some can be permanent ectoparasites
ticks are ectoparasites during the entire life history
Opiliones
Acarina
Class Pycnogonida
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sea spiders
all are marine
most common in cold waters
live on the ocean floor
feed on cnidarian polyps and
ectoprocts
• some feed through sucking
tissues through a proboscis
Phylum Arthropoda
• Subphylum Crustacea: mostly aquatic; head with
two pairs of antennae; one pair of mandibles and
two pairs of maxillae; biramous appendages
– Class Malacostraca
– Class Branchiopoda
– Class Maxillopoda
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Order Araneae: 34,000 species of spiders (carnivorous)
– prosoma: bears chelicerae with poison glands and fangs
– pedipalps around the mouth are leglike
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Class Arachnida
are modified in the males for sperm transfer
– opisthoma/abdomen: swollen and contains openings to the reproductive tract, book lungs and
trachea
– end of the opisthoma – spinnerets - associated with silk glands – emits a protein as a liquid that
hardens with air as it is drawn out = web for prey capture
– bite their prey to paralyze them – puncture the body with their chelicerae and inject venom
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suck out the blood first, then inject digestive enzymes to “liquefy” internal organs
– few are toxic to humans – Black widow (Lactrodectus) and brown recluse (Loxosceles)
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mating involves complex behaviors
involving tactile, chemical and visual signals
Subphylum Crustacea
Class Malacostraca = the crayfish
Crayfish dissection
External Anatomy
1 – uropods
2 – telson
3 – abdomen
4 – cephalothorax
5 – cephalic groove
6 – walking legs
7 – cheliped
8 – eye
9 – rostrum
a - antennae
Crayfish dissection
– 8 paired appendages are present on the cephalothorax
• first two pairs = first and second antennae
• third through fifth are associated with the mouth – crushing, tearing food
– the 3rd pair = mandibles
– 4th and 5th = maxillae (#1 and #2)
• 6th through the 8th are called the maxillipeds – food handling
– last two maxillipeds bear gills
antennules (1)
antennae (2)
mandible (3)
second maxillae (4)
first maxilliped (5),
second maxilliped (6)
third maxillipeds (7)
walking legs or chelipeds (8)
openings to the green glands
(9)
• appendages 9 through 13 are on the thorax – called walking legs (or periopods)
– first pair (pair #9) is called the cheliped (4) – chelicera used in defense and capturing
food
– remaining pairs are for walking/crawling along the sea floor
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1 = uropods
2 = pleopods or swimmerets
3 = walking legs or periopods
4 = cheliped (1st walking leg)
5 = 1st swimmeret
6 = antennae
• appendages 14 through 18 are on the abdomen – called swimmerets or pleopods (2)
– 1st pair of swimmeret is larger in the male – for sperm transfer
– abdomen is associated with the telson
» bears the anus which is flanked on either side by flattened biramous appendages
called the uropods (1)
» flipperlike structure used for swimming
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1 = uropods
2 = pleopods or swimmerets
3 = walking legs or periopods
4 = cheliped (1st walking leg)
5 = 1st swimmeret
6 = antennae
» in females – eggs attach to the pleopods and the embryos brood
on these “legs” until hatching
» in males – the first two pleopods (#10 and #11) are modified into
gonopods or claspers for sperm transfer
Male
1 – swimmeret
2 – male genital opening
3 – 1st pair of swimmerets - clasper
4 – 7 – walking legs
8 – base of the first pair of walking legs
Female
1 – swimmeret
2 – seminal receptacle
3 – walking leg #5
4 – walking leg #4
5 – female genital opening
6 – walking leg #2
Male crayfish
Male crayfish
modified first swimmerets called gonopods (1)
openings to each vas deferens (2)
third (3), fourth (4) and fifth (5) walking legs
swimmerets (1)
opening to the seminal
receptacle (2)
openings to the oviducts (3)
third pair of walking legs
(4).
Note: These openings have
been expanded
to make them more visible.
Female crayfish
Crayfish meat
abdominal flexor muscles (1) & abdominal extensor muscles (2) = MEAT
intestine (3), one of the fifth walking legs (4), carapace (7), uropods (5) and telson (7).
Crayfish internal anatomy
digestive gland
1 – walking legs
2 – gills
3 – cephalic groove
4 – 3rd pair maxilloped
5 –cheliped
6 – right eye
7 – rostrum
8 – right long antenna
Internal anatomy
green glands (1) , compound eyes (2), the digestive gland (3),
mandibular muscles (4), gills (5), abdominal extensor muscle (6),
a portion of the fifth walking leg (7), and one of the third maxillipeds
Class Branchiopoda
• primarily live in freshwater
• all possess flattened, leaflike
appendages used in respiration,
filter feeding and locomotion
• order Cladocera: water fleas
sea monkey
– e.g. Daphnia
– large carapace covers their body
– sexual reproduction produces “wintering
eggs” that hatch in spring
• order Anostraca: fairy shrimp and
brine shrimp
– fairy shrimp live in temporary ponds that are
formed through thaws and rains
– eggs are brooded by the female
– after the female dies and the pond dries –
eggs encyst and enter a dormant stage
– with water – hatch into larval stages
– dormant embryos can be carried by wind
and rain
daphnia
water flea
fairy shrimp
Phylum Arthropoda
• Subphylum Hexapoda: body divided into head,
thorax and abdomen; five pairs of head
appendages; three pairs of uniramous
appendages on the thorax
– Class Insecta
• Subphylum Myriapoda: body divided into a head
and trunk; four pairs of head appendages;
uniramous appendages
– Class Diplopoda
– Class Chilopoda
Subphylum Myriapoda
• terrestrial
• 4 classes – characterized by a
body consisting of head and
trunk plus uniramous
appendages
• Class Symphyla
• Class Pauropoda
• Class Diplopoda: millipedes
• Class Chilopoda: centipedes
Class Diplopoda
Class Chilopoda
Subphylum Myriapoda
• Class Diplopoda: millipedes
– head with mandibles for chewing + two antennae
– circular body with 11 to 100 trunk segments – each segment is actually two
segments fused together
– two pairs of legs per segment – push against the substrate for locomotion
– two ganglia, two pairs of ostia and two tracheal trunks per segment
– feed on decaying plant material using mandibles
Subphylum Myriapoda
• Class Chilopoda: centipedes
– nocturnal
– head with maxillae and mandibles +
2 antennae + compound eyes or
ocelli
– flattened body - 15 or more trunk
segments each with one pair of legs
per segment
– first pair of legs modified into
forcipules or venom claws
• not seen in other arthropods
– rest of the legs = maxillopeds
– fast-moving predators – small
arthropods, earthworms and snails
– bite can be annoying to humans
Subphylum Hexapoda = Insects
Grasshopper External Anatomy
Grasshopper Internal Anatomy
Dorsal view
ovaries
Ventral view
gastric caecae below
the crop
Malphigian tubules
Tracheae
hindgut/intestine
ovipositor
Subphylum Trilobitomorpha
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the fifth, extinct subphylum
trilobites
dominant form of life in the oceans 600 MYA
crawled along the substrate feeding on annelids, molluscs and decaying organic
matter
oval body – flattened and divided into three longitudinal regions
all body segments are articular – roll into a ball
appendages – two lobes or rami – called biramous
inner lobe - walking leg
outer lobe bears spikes or teeth – digging or swimming or as gills in gas exchange