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Crustaceans Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vENk9QPp4M Crustaceans  All Arthropods have:  Exoskeleton  Jointed legs Source: https://www.thoughtco.com/subphylum-crustacea-crustaceans-1968439 Crustaceans Basics  Crustaceans are Arthropods  Animal Kingdom  Phylum Arthropoda  Subphylum Crustacea  The name Crustacean comes from crusta meaning “crust” or “hard shelled ones”, due to the hard body armor typical of these animals  Most crustaceans live in the ocean and filter feed, scavenge, are predatory, or parasitic  However, some live in freshwater and others are terrestrial Known Crustaceans  The most well-known crustaceans include:  Lobsters  Crabs  Shrimp  Crayfish/Crawfish Crustaceans Physical Characteristics  Crustaceans have four body parts:  Eyes  Antennae  Mouthparts  Swimmerets  Although it is typically classified as three (head, thorax, abdomen) or two (cephalothorax and abdomen) Crustaceans Physical Characteristics (continued)  All crustaceans have four antennae (only arthropod to have four antennae)  Large  Small  Crustaceans do not have a heart but rather have an open circulatory system  They have compound eyes Crustacean Reproduction  Typically reproduce sexually and fertilize externally but they are some species which regularly reproduce asexually  Eggs are held in brood chambers attached to the abdomen, or attached to abdominal appendages  Most crustaceans have a larvae which is unlike the adult and so must undergo metamorphosis  However, crayfish develop directly without a larvae form Crustacean Population  There are more than 800 families and over 40,000 species  Some species live on land but 99% live in some type of water, either fresh or saltwater  Found in all different sizes, from a few inches to 10 feet History  Crustaceans first appeared around 600 million years ago  Fossils of over 2,000 species have been found Main Crustacean Classes  Branchiopods – mostly small, freshwater animals that feed on plankton and detritus  Remipedia – blind crustacean found in coastal saline aquifers  Cephalocarida – horseshoe shrimp  Maxillopoda – include barnacles and copepods (most abundant type of crustacean)  Copepoda – fish lice  Pentastomida – tongue worms  Ostracoda – sometimes known as seed shrimp  Malacostraca – includes the most well-known crustaceans  Includes lobsters, crabs, crayfish, shrimp, krill, and woodlice Malacostraca  Largest and most diverse class of Crustacea with over 20,000 species  Typically have a head with 5 fused segments, a thorax, with 8 segments, and an abdomen with six segments Order Isopoda  This order includes pill bugs  These are the only truly terrestrial crustaceans Order Amphipoda  Marine, freshwater, and terrestrial forms  Amphipods resemble isopods Order Euphausiacea  Contains 90 species  Includes planktonic kelp, baleen whales main food source Order Decapoda  All Decapods have 5 pairs of walking legs and typically a pair of front pinchers  Lobsters  Lobsters are cold blooded, meaning their body temperature depends on the temperature of the water  Most lobsters are nocturnal  Largest lobster ever caught was 44 pounds  They may live to be 100 years old  Come in a variety of colors and textures  Due to its abdominal flexors and shape of its tail, lobsters can dart backward in the water if needed to escape possible predators Image: 22 pound lobster Order Decapoda (continued)  Crabs  There are about 4,500 different kinds of crabs  Crabs have well developed senses that help them find food and stay away from predators  Crabs have three sets of jaws which help them crush food into tiny pieces for easy digestion Crayfish Basics  Also called crawfish or crawdad, interchangeably  Considered close cousins of lobster, crabs, and shrimp  Lobster, crab, and shrimp live in salt water  Crayfish live in freshwater, in lakes and streams  They are found in every continent except Africa and Antarctica  More than 230 species live in the US  New species are discovered every year Crayfish Facts  They are NOT fish  Although they breathe with gills, they can stay out of water as long as their gills stay wet  Have five pair of legs  4 pair are used for walking  One pair is a set of pinchers used to grab things, especially food and for digging Crayfish Growth  Their exoskeleton does not grow  When they get too big for their shell, they molt and break out of their old shell  At this time, they are very vulnerable to predators until their new shell hardens  They will molt many times throughout their life  They can also regenerate lost body parts Crayfish Diet  They hunt for food at night  Eat almost anything small  - They clean up stream and lake beds  - Eat decaying plants and animals Crayfish Sensing  Eyes are located on stalks that can move around  In front of the two eyes are two sets of feelers or antennae  One set is long  The other set is short  The antennae are covered in tiny hairs which help them touch, taste, and smell Crayfish Reproduction  Crayfish lay eggs  Females lay the eggs and crawls into a hiding place to protect them  When the eggs hatch, they stay stuck to the mother’s tail until ready to swim of their own Crayfish Predators  Predators of crayfish include racoons, otters, mink, fish, turtles, some birds, and people  Crayfish hide under rocks or burrow into mud  They can defend themselves with their claws  Can swim backward Shrimp  There are over 2,000 different species of shrimp worldwide  Range in size from a fraction of an inch to 9 inches long  Shrimp are eaten by many animals including many fish, birds, octopi, squid, cuttlefish, and people  Mutualism: some shrimp live on anemones and keep them clean in return for protection Maxillopoda  Include barnacles in the subclass Thecostrae.  These are mostly sessile crustaceans  Feed by extending legs through calcareous plates to filter feed  Barnacles are hermaphroditic  Some lack gills (Branchiura Subclass)  Ectoparasites of marine and freshwater fish  Range from 5-10 mm long  Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAzMhI7SEN8  Endoparasites such as tongue worms  Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppE oQ9U8kQ8  Infect respiratory systems of vertebrates, mostly reptiles but occasionally mammals, and airsacs of birds  Range from 1 to 13 cm in length Remipedia  Genetic studies show they are the crustacean most closely related to insects and are most primitive form of crustacean  Many even resemble many species of aquatic insect larvae  Only 10 described species  All known species are found in caves to the sea  Have between 25 and 38 segments Ostracoda  Often have short bodies and lack appendages  Many species are parasitic  Enclosed in a two-part carapace and look somewhat like a clam  Typically around 1 mm but can be up to 30 mm in length  Can be found on the sea floor or in freshwater habitats  Also found in humid forest soils  Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xEMhwvNO5s Cephalocarida  Only 12 described benthic species  Live in coastal bottoms from intertidal zones to 300 m deep  Lack eyes, a carapace, and abdominal appendages  Hermaphrodites: Discharge eggs and sperm from same duct  Referred to as horseshoe shrimp  2-4 mm long  No fossil records found  Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwaUCwg3zx8 Branchiopoda  Class characteristic is that they have legs, called phyllopodia, that serve as respiratory organs. These legs may be used for filter feeding and locomotion.  Branchiopoda species are mostly freshwater species Branchiopoda (continued)  Includes Order Anostraca (Fairy and brine shrimp), Order Notostraca (Tadpole shrimp (triops)), and Diplostraca (water fleas)  About 800 species of brine shrimp alive today  Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmfN4l-MolI Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-Uq2fl3duQ  Anostraca – Do not have a carapace  Notostraca – Carapace forms a large dorsal shield. Tadpole Shrimp are a living fossil, similar to horseshoe crabs, at close to 400 million years old, mostly unchanged for the past 250 million years  Diplostraca – Carapace encloses entire body but not head. This includes the water flea and is the most diverse order of all the brachiopods Diplostraca - Water Fleas  Water fleas have are over 600 different recognized species  Present in almost all inland aquatic habitats but are rare in the oceans  Most are only 0.2 to 6.0 mm long  Have a single median compound eye Video: Daphnia Heart Beat: https://www.youtube. com/watch?v=M4wC q-yMj_w Water Fleas (continued)  Mostly asexual but can reproduce sexually. During sexual reproduction, resting (dormant) eggs are produced which allow the species to survive harsh conditions such as cold and desiccation  Males are only produced when unfavorable conditions arise  Since they are planktonic and therefore the base of the food chain, they are frequently used as an indicator of toxic conditions, observed by whether or not they reproduce and/or survive a given aquatic environment. Video: Daphnia Heart Beat Explanation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibDwYghgb2k Video: Daphnia Babies: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7UFjsAYr3Y Video of Lab Procedures: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhOUwlOdxkA