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Arachnida
• Spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions
Spider structure
Cephalothorax
• Anterior region of the body
Abdomen
• Posterior region of the body
Eyes
• 8 simple eyes on the cephalothorax
Pedipalps
• Foot like appendages used for: feeling, sensing
chemicals, holding food, communication and
mating
Chelicerae
• The fangs for injecting venom – all spiders are
carnivores
Sucking stomach
• Sucks in liquefied food
Digestive gland
• Secretes enzymes to finish digestion
Dorsal heart
• Enlarged blood vessel (aorta)
Book lungs
• (breathing), opening is on the abdomen
Silk glands and spinnerets
• Found on abdomen, used for: wrapping prey,
making webs, egg sacs, safety lines, ballooning
Wrapping prey
Spinning a web
Egg sacs
Safety line
Ballooning
Spider reproduction
• Male transfers sperm to females seminal
receptacle with pedipalps. Later, female
releases egg and sperm into egg sac where
fertilization occurs.
Spider affects on humans
• Positive – controls insect populations
Spider affects on humans
• Negative – black widow is most dangerous in
U.S., brown recluse is 2nd, hobo spider is 3rd
Spider bites
Goliath Bird-Eating Spider
Other arachnids
Harvestmen (daddy-long-legs)
• Not a spider – doesn’t have 2 distinct body
regions and doesn’t produce silk or venom
Ticks
• Parasites, suck blood from their host
Tick diseases
• Lymes disease
Muscle ache
Stiff neck
Migraine
Flu like symptoms
Fatigue
Rash that looks like a “bull’s eye”
Tick diseases
• Rocky Mountain spotted fever
Fever
Nausea
Vomiting
Loss of appetite
Spotted rash
Tick diseases
• Bubonic plague
Gangrene in fingers and toes
Buboes – caused by swollen lymph
nodes
Mites
• Some do crop damage
Mite diseases
• Chiggers – mite larvae that bore into the skin
causing severe itching
Scorpions
• Sting forward over their head, some are
dangerous to humans
Predators
• Their pincers are their main weapons which
are really extensions of their mouths
(pedipalps)
Watch out for the small ones…
Arizona Bark Scorpion is the only species in
the U.S. that is considered threatening
The larger the pincers, the less venom they have
Nocturnal
Can easily be seen at night with a black light – exoskeleton causes them to glow
Crustacea
• Lobsters, crab, shrimp, crayfish
Non-typical crustaceans
• Pill bugs (rolly polly), barnacles, daphnia,
cyclops
Zooplankton
• Organisms that drift with ocean currents and
can’t photosynthesize – most are crustaceans
and are VITAL to aquatic systems
Largest Crab
• Japanese Spider Crab
Leg span of almost 4 meters
Hermit Crab
Coconut Crab
known for its ability to crack coconuts
with its strong pincers in order to eat
the contents
Crayfish structure
Red is most common, then blue, then white
Cephalothorax
• Anterior body region of a crustacean
Abdomen
• Posterior body region of a crustacean
Carapace
• Top shell of a crustacean
Antennae
• Feeling and sensing chemicals
Antennules
• Sense vibrations – gives them balance
Chelipeds
• Claws used for tearing food and for defense
Legs
• 4 pair for walking, 1 pair for grabbing
(chelipeds)
Swimmerets
• Aid in swimming, females carry eggs
Green gland
• Excretory organs that get rid of nitrogenous
wastes
Crayfish respiration
• Gills are under the carapace and attached to
legs
Crayfish circulation
• Dorsal heart inside the pericardium, open
circulatory system
Self amputation and regeneration
• If a cheliped is damaged, they remove it and
regrow another one