1-arthropods2009 - holyoke
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Transcript 1-arthropods2009 - holyoke
Phylum Arthropoda
Arthropods
Make up about 80% of the known animal
species
Insects are by far the most common species of
arthropods
Arthropod means joint-footed
Range from the deep sea to mountain peaks
Bilateral symmetry
Growth requires molting
General Arthropod Characteristics
Arthropods have:
1. Exoskeleton
- Most prominent characteristic is their outside
skeleton, or exoskeleton.
- Exoskeleton provides support, protection and
attachment site for muscles. Made of protein and
chitin
Chitin is a strong, flexible, polysaccharide
- All arthropods molt, or shed their exoskeletons
periodically. After it molts, it grows before the new
skeleton hardens.
- Skin glands digest the inner part of the exoskeleton
and other glands secrete the new one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffo37DlH5DM
General Arthropod Characteristics
Arthropods have:
2. Segmented Bodies
- Have segmented bodies that show various
patterns of segment fusion (tagmosis) to form
integrated unit like the head, abdomen, ...
General Arthropod Characteristics
Arthropods have:
3. Jointed Appendages
- Have joints between
body sections (includes
legs and antennae)
- Have jointed
appendages (a structure
such as a leg that grows
out from the main part
of the body)
Arthropod Characteristics
Cephalization is more prominent than in
annelids (brain and complex sense organs in
the head region)
Special organs sense touch, vibration, and
chemicals. The eyes of many arthropods are
particularly specialized.
Open circulatory system. The dorsal heart
pumps blood from the posterior end of the
animal to the anterior end.
- Blood moves through the hemocoel (major body
cavity)
Phylum Arthropoda –
2 Subphylum
Subphylum Chelicerates
Class Arachnida
Spiders, scorpions, mites, ticks
Subphylum Mandibulates (4 major classes)
Class Crustacea
Crayfish, Crab, Lobster
Class Chilopoda
Centipedes
Class Diplopoda
Millipedes
Class Insecta
Insects, Grasshoppers
Subphyla Chelicera
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChalmuPdek
Chelicera are pointed appendages (modest
pinchers) used for feeding and manipulating food
(in lieu of chewing mandibles)
The body of chelicerates has two major parts:
1. The cephalothorax is a fused section composed of the
head and any body segments that have legs attached.
2. The abdomen consists of posterior segments that
contain most of the internal organs.
Lack antennae
Nearly all have 4 legs
Subphlya Chelicera:
Class Arachnida
Subphyla Mandibulata
Unlike chelicerates, mandibulates have mandibles, or jaws, for chewing food.
All mandibulates have antennae
Three distinct body regions
- segmented sense organs on the head
- head, thorax, abdomen
They have three or more pairs of
walking legs
Subphyla Mandibulata:
1. Class Crustacea
Crustaceans typically have:
- two pairs of antennae
- two or three body sections
Cephalothorax – head fused with the thorax
- chewing mouthparts called mandibles.
- 5 or more pairs of legs
• Primarily aquatic, few terrestrial
Ex:
Crustacean
Subphyla Mandibulata:
2. Class Chilopoda
(centipedes) & 3. Class
Diplopoda (millipedes)
Subphyla Mandibulata:
Class Insecta
Insects typically have:
The three distinct segments (head, thorax,
abdomen)
Three pairs of legs attached to the thorax
Mandibles
One pair of antennae
One pair of compound eyes
Two pairs of wings on the thorax
Tracheal tubes for respiration
Tracheal tubes open to the outside through small
holes called spiracles