Transcript Chapter 19
Trilobites, Chelicerates,
and Myriapods
Chapter 19
Phylum Arthropoda
Two out of every
three known
species of animals
are arthropods.
Members of the
phylum
Arthropoda are
found in nearly all
habitats of the
biosphere.
Phylum Arthropoda
Arthropods are:
Multicellular
Bilaterally symmetrical
Triploblastic
Have a true coelom (protostomes)
Segmented
General Characteristics of
Arthropods
The diversity and success of arthropods are largely
related to their segmentation, hard exoskeleton
(made of chitin), and jointed appendages.
General Characteristics of
Arthropods
Segments have combined into functional groups called
tagmata.
Tagmata have specialized purposes.
General Characteristics of
Arthropods
As arthropods evolved, the segments fused, and the
appendages became more specialized.
The appendages of some living arthropods are
modified for many different functions.
General Characteristics of
Arthropods
Arthropods have an open circulatory system in which
fluid called hemolymph is circulated into the spaces
surrounding the tissues and organs.
A variety of organs specialized for gas exchange have
evolved in arthropods.
A Versatile Exoskeleton
The exoskeleton of
arthropods is very
protective, but still
flexible.
The exoskeleton is
made of chitin.
Prevents desiccation.
Provides places for muscle attachment.
Does not allow for growth, the outer covering must
be molted – ecdysis.
More Efficient Locomotion
Usually, each segment bears a pair of jointed
appendages.
The appendages have sensory hairs and may be
modified for sensory functions, food handling, or
walking & swimming.
Air Piped Directly to Cells
Most terrestrial arthropods have an efficient tracheal
system of air tubes, which delivers oxygen directly to
the tissues and cells.
Limits body size.
Aquatic arthropods breathe using internal or external gills.
Highly Developed Sensory Organs
Arthropods have a
variety of sensory
organs.
Complex Behavior Patterns
Arthropods show
complex behavior
patterns.
Mostly innate
behaviors.
Some learned.
Metamorphosis
Intraspecific
competition
(between members
of one species) is
reduced because of
metamorphosis.
Larval forms may
be quite different
from adults.
Relationships Among Arthropod
Subgroups
Clade Panarthropoda, Phylum Arthropoda
Divided into subphyla based on relationships
between subgroups based on molecular data.
Relationships Among Arthropod
Subgroups
Centipedes,
millipedes,
pauropods, and
symphylans are
placed in subphylum
Myriapoda.
Insects are placed in
subphylum
Hexapoda.
Spiders, ticks, horseshoe crabs and their relatives form
subphylum Chelicerata.
Lobsters, crabs, barnacles, and others form
subphylum Crustacea.
Relationships Among Arthropod
Subgroups
Formerly, insects and
myriapods were placed
together in uniramia.
Uniramous
appendages.
The “mandibulate
hypothesis” suggests all
arthropods with
mandibles are more
closely related to each
other than to arthropods
with chelicerae.
Mandibles in each group may or may not be
homologous.
mtDNA data support this hypothesis.
Subphylum Trilobita
Early arthropods, such as trilobites showed
little variation from segment to segment.
Subphylum Trilobita
Trilobites arose
during the Cambrian
– maybe earlier and
lasted for 300 million
years.
Subphylum Trilobita
Trilobites had a trilobed shape.
Three tagmata:
Head (cephalon) with a mouth, compound eyes,
antennae, and 4 pairs of leglike appendages.
Trunk with a variable number of segments each with a
pair of biramous appendages.
One of the branches of biramous appendage was fringed
and may have been a gill.
Pygidium – segments fused into a plate.
Subphylum Trilobita
Most could roll up like pill bugs.
Probably benthic scavengers.
Many (especially later species) had large, complex,
many-faceted eyes.
Subphylum Chelicerata
Chelicerate arthropods include eurypterids, horseshoe
crabs, spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions, & sea spiders.
Subphylum Chelicerata
They have 6
pairs of
cephalothoracic
appendages:
Chelicerae
(mouthparts)
Pedipalps
4 pairs of
walking legs
Lack mandibles
and antennae.
Class Merostomata
Class Merostomata
includes the eurypterids
and horseshoe crabs.
Eurypterids were giant
water scorpions up to 3 m
in length.
Cambrian through
Permian.
Predators, some with large
crushing claws.
Class Merostomata
Three genera of
horseshoe crabs
live today.
Limulus, found in
North America,
has existed on
earth almost
unchanged since
the Triassic
period.
Class Merostomata
Horseshoe crabs have an unsegmented
carapace (hard dorsal shield), a broad
abdomen, and a long telson (tail piece).
Cephalothorax
Chelicerae
Pedipalps
4 pairs walking legs
Abdomen
6 pairs of thin appendages
Book gills found on 5.
Class Merostomata
Horseshoe crabs have simple and compound eyes.
Feed at night on worms and small molluscs.
Come to shore in large numbers to mate at high tide.
Trilobite larvae resemble trilobites.
Class Pycnogonida
Sea spiders, class
Pycnogonida, have
small, thin bodies and
usually 4 pairs of
walking legs.
Found in all oceans,
most common in polar
seas.
Some have chelicerae
and pedipalps.
Class Arachnida
Class Arachnida includes spiders, scorpions, mites,
and ticks.
50 µm
Class Arachnida
Two tagmata:
Cephalothorax
Chelicerae
Pedipalps
4 pairs walking legs
Abdomen
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
Most spiders – order Araneae
– have 8 simple eyes that can
detect light and motion.
Some hunting & jumping
spiders may form images.
Sensory setae detect air
currents, web vibrations, and
other stimuli.
Spider’s vision usually poor,
so awareness of environment
depends largely on cuticular
mechanoreceptors such as
sensory setae.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
All are predaceous,
mostly on insects.
Many spin a web used
for prey capture.
Some chase & catch
prey.
Injected venom
liquefies and digests
the tissues which is
sucked into spider’s
stomach.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
Two or three pairs of
spinnerets contain
microscopic tubes that run
to silk glands.
Liquid scleroprotein
secretion hardens as it is
extruded from spinnerets.
Silk threads are very
strong and will stretch
considerably before
breaking.
Silk is used for orb webs,
lining burrows, forming
egg sacs, and wrapping
prey.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
Breathe by book lungs and/or tracheae.
Book lungs unique to spiders - parallel air pockets extend into
blood-filled chamber.
Air enters chamber through a slit in body wall.
Tracheae system is less extensive than in insects.
Transports air directly to tissues.
Tracheal systems of arthropods represent a case of evolutionary
convergence.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
In spiders and insects, Malpighian tubules
serve as excretory structures.
Potassium, other solutes, and waste are secreted
into tubules.
Rectal glands reabsorb the potassium and water,
leaving wastes and uric acid for excretion.
Conserves water and allows the organisms to live in
dry environments.
Many spiders have coxal glands, modified
nephridia, at the base of legs.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
Reproduction - before mating, male stores
sperm in pedipalps.
A courtship ritual is often required before the female
will allow mating.
Eggs may develop in a cocoon in the web or may be
carried by female.
Young hatch in about two weeks and may molt
before leaving the egg cocoon.
Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
Are spiders really dangerous?
Spiders are allies of humans in our battle with insects.
American tarantulas rarely bite, and bite is not dangerous.
Species of black widow spiders are dangerous.
Venom is neurotoxic.
Brown recluse spider has hemolytic venom that destroys tissue
around the bite.
Some Australian and South American spiders are the most
dangerous and aggressive.
Class Arachnida - Order Scorpiones
Scorpions – order
Scorpiones – feed on
insects & spiders which
they seize with their
pedipalps.
The last segment
contains a bulbous base
and a curved barb that
injects venom.
Scorpions are viviparous
or ovoviviparous –
females brood young
within their reproductive
tract.
Class Arachnida - Order Opiliones
Harvestmen – order
Opiliones – differ from
spiders in that the
abdomen and
cephalothorax are
broadly joined rather
than constricted.
Only two eyes
Abdomen shows
segmentation
Long legs end in tiny
claws.
Class Arachnida - Order Acari
Mites and ticks – order Acari – have a fused
cephalothorax & abdomen.
Mites are tiny – 1mm or less.
Some feed on plant juices and can be major pests.
Several species of ticks carry diseases such as
Lyme disease.
Class Arachnida - Order Acari
House dust mites free-living and often
cause allergies.
Spider mites - one of
many important
agricultural pest
mites that suck out
plant nutrients.
Class Arachnida - Order Acari
Hair follicle mite
Demodex - harmless
but other species
cause mange in
domestic animals.
Human itch mite
causes intense
itching.
Class Arachnida - Order Acari
Tick species of
Ixodes carry Lyme
disease.
Tick species of
Dermacentor
transmit Rocky
Mountain spotted
fever.
Cattle tick transmits
Texas cattle fever.
Subphylum Myriapoda
Subphylum
Myriapoda includes
these classes:
Chilopoda
(centipedes)
Diplopoda (millipedes)
Pauropoda
(pauropods)
Symphyla
(symphylans)
Use trachea to transport air.
Excretion usually by Malpighian tubules.
Class Chilopoda
Centipedes – class
Chilopoda – contain
a few or many
segments each
(except the first
behind the head and
the last two) with a
pair of jointed legs.
Last pair of legs has
a sensory function.
Class Chilopoda
Head appendages:
One pair antennae
One pair mandibles
One or two pairs of maxillae.
Dorsoventrally flattened.
Class Chilopoda
Sexes are separate.
Some lay eggs (oviparous).
Some have live young (viviparous).
Young like little adults – no metamorphosis.
Class Chilopoda
Centipedes live in moist environments.
They are carnivores, feeding on insects &
worms.
Prey is killed with poison claws on the first
segment.
Class Diplopoda
Millipedes (Class
Diplopoda) have two
pairs of legs on each
segment.
Head has one pair
each of antennae,
mandibles, &
maxillae.
Body is more
cylindrical.
Class Diplopoda
Millipedes live in dark, moist places – under
rocks or logs.
Most are herbivores, feeding on decayed plant
matter or occasionally living plants.
Slow moving, coil up when disturbed.
Toxic or repellent fluids secreted when
disturbed.
Class Diplopoda
After copulation,
female lays eggs in
a nest and guards
them.
Larvae have only
one pair of legs per
segment.
Class Pauropoda
Live in moist soil, leaf litter,
decaying vegetation, or
under bark and debris.
Least well known of
myriapods.
Soft-bodied, small (2 mm
or less).
Head lacks true eyes, has
branched antennae, and a
pair of sense organs.
Lack tracheae, spiracles,
and circulatory system.
Probably most closely
related to diplopods.
Class Symphyla
Live in humus, leaf mold,
and debris.
Small (2–10 mm) with
centipede-like bodies.
Soft-bodied with 14
segments - 12 segments
bear legs and one bears a
pair of spinnerets.
Antennae are long and
unbranched.
Eyeless with sensory pits
at base of antennae.
Phylogeny
Relationships between subphyla are debated.
Taxon of Pancrustacea, which includes
hexapods and crustaceans, is well-supported.
Phylogenies using molecular data rarely
support grouping Myriapoda with
Pancrustacea.
There is support for placement of Myriapoda as
the sister taxon for Cheliceratae.
Phylogeny
Biologists assume that the ancestral arthropod
had a segmented body with one pair of legs per
segment.
Evolution caused adjacent segments to fuse
and to make body regions.
Hox gene studies indicate that the first five
segments fused to form the head tagma in all
four extant subphyla.
In spiders, Hox gene studies indicate that the
entire prosoma corresponds to the head of
other arthropods.
Adaptive Diversification
In contrast to annelids, arthropods have
pronounced tagmatization by fusion of somites.
Those with primitive characters have appendages
on each somite.
Derived forms are specialized.
Modification of exoskeleton and appendages
allowed variation in feeding and movement.
Adaptations made possible by cuticular
exoskeleton and small size fostered high diversity.
Phylogeny
Subphylum Trilobita
Subphylum Chelicerata
Class Merostomata
Class Pycnogonida
Class Arachnida
Subphylum Myriapoda
Class Diplopoda
Class Chilopoda
Class Pauropoda
Class Symphyla
Subphylum Crustacea
Subphylum Hexapoda