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Ecdysozoans: The Molting Animals 33 Ecdysozoans: The Molting Animals • Cuticles: Flexible, Unsegmented Exoskeletons • Arthropods and Their Relatives: Segmented External Skeletons • Crustaceans: Diverse and Abundant • Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Arthropods with Two Body Regions • Themes in the Evolution of Protostomes 33 Introduction • An exoskeleton is a firm, nonliving covering that is difficult to penetrate and provides an animal with both protection and support. • Exoskeletons pose a huge problem: They cannot grow as the animal body inside them grows. • A solution evolved in the ancestors of the ecdysozoans. • They shed, or molt, the outgrown exoskeleton and expand and harden a new, larger one. • The presence of the exoskeleton required the evolution of new forms of movement and respiration. Figure 33.1 A Current Phylogeny of the Ecdysozoans 33 Cuticles: Flexible, Unsegmented Exoskeletons • Some ecdysozoans have wormlike bodies covered by thick and flexible exoskeletons called cuticles. • The three phyla with thin cuticles include the Priapulida, Kinorhyncha, and Chaetognatha. These phyla contain very few species. • A thin cuticle allows the exchange of gases, minerals, and water across the body surface, but restricts the animal to moist habitats. • Their bodies are supported primarily by hydrostatic skeletons, not by their thin cuticles. Figure 33.2 A Priapulid Figure 33.3 An Arrow Worm 33 Cuticles: Flexible, Unsegmented Exoskeletons • Two phyla represent a lineage of ecdysozoans that developed tough external cuticles: Nematomorpha and Nematoda. 33 Cuticles: Flexible, Unsegmented Exoskeletons • The roundworms (phylum Nematoda) know as the pseudocoelomates. • They have a thick, multilayered cuticle that gives their body its shape. A roundworm sheds its cuticle four times as it grows. • About 25,000 species of roundworms have been described, but the actual number of living species may be more than a million. • Roundworms exchange oxygen and nutrients with the environment through their cuticle and intestine. • Rhythmic contraction of the pharynx at the worm’s anterior moves materials through the gut. 33 Cuticles: Flexible, Unsegmented Exoskeletons • The roundworms are one of the most abundant and universally distributed animal groups. • There are predatory and parasitic species of roundworms. • Some parasitic roundworms cause serious diseases such as trichinosis. • The life cycles of many parasitic species have special stages that facilitate their transfer among hosts. Figure 33.5 Roundworms 33 Arthropods and Their Relatives: Segmented External Skeletons • During the Precambrian era, some wormlike ecdysozoans developed a layer of protective material called chitin, a strong, flexible, waterproof polysaccharide. • This change gave their rigid body covering both support and locomotory functions. • A rigid body does not allow wormlike movement; such animals require appendages that can be manipulated by muscles. • Appendages evolved several times late in the Precambrian era, leading to the phyla collectively called the arthropods. 33 Arthropods and Their Relatives: Segmented External Skeletons • The trilobites (phylum Trilobita) were once the dominant line of arthropods, flourishing in the Cambrian and Ordovician seas before becoming extinct by the Paleozoic era. • They were heavily armored and had jointed appendages that showed the beginnings of specialization. Figure 33.7 A Trilobite 33 Arthropods and Their Relatives: Segmented External Skeletons • Arthropod appendages have evolved an amazing variety of forms and functions, including walking and swimming, gas exchange, food capture, copulation, and sensory perception. • The similarities in segmentation patterns among arthropods arise from the actions of common developmental genes. • The arthropod body plan is characterized by a rigid exoskeleton with jointed appendages. Figure 33.8 Arthropod Exoskeletons Are Rigid and Jointed 33 Arthropods and Their Relatives: Segmented External Skeletons • This exoskeleton made aquatic arthropods excellent candidates for invading terrestrial environments, which they did several times. • We will be looking at the following classes of arthropods: Merostomata (Horseshoe crabs); Crustacea (shrimp, crab, lobster); Arachnida (spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions); Insecta (insects); Chilopoda (centipedes); Diplopoda (millipedes) • The arthropods are the dominant animals on Earth, with about 1.5 million described species and an estimated 1018 individuals. 33 Class Merostomata • Class Merostomata - Horseshoe crabs • Notable Features: Common on the Atlantic coast in shallow water on sandy or muddy shores. Feed chiefly on marine worms. Characterized by oval shell and long spinelike tail. 33 Figure 33.16 Minor Chelicerate Phyla (Part 2) 33 Crustaceans: Diverse and Abundant • The crustaceans (phylum Crustacea) are the dominant marine arthropods. • Members of the crustacean class Copepoda may be the most abundant of all animals. • Nearly all members have a body divided into three regions: A head (cephalothorax) whose segments are fused together and which bears five pairs of appendages A thorax with multiple segments that usually bear one pair of appendages each An abdomen with multiple segments that also usually bear one pair of appendages each Figure 33.10 Crustacean Structure 33 Crustaceans: Diverse and Abundant • Many species have a fold of exoskeleton, called the carapace, that extends dorsally and laterally back from the head to protect other segments. • In most species, fertilized eggs are attached outside of the female’s body. • Some species release the young as larvae, while others are released as juveniles similar in form to adults. • The crustacean lineage may have been ancestral to all present-day arthropods. 33 Class Crustacea • Order Branchiopoda - fairy shrimp, tadpole shrimp, clam shrimp, water fleas • Notable Features: Occur in fresh water; males are uncommon in many species and parthenogenesis is a common mode of reproduction. Ferry shrimp - body elongate and distinctly segmented without carapace and 11 pair of swimming legs; eyes are stalked; abundant in temporary pools 33 Class Crustacea • Class Cirripedia - Barnacles • Notable Features: Adults live attached to rocks, pilings, seaweed, boats, or marine animals. Usually enclosed in calcarious shells; most are hemaphrodidic. Most sessile and attach to object usually by a stalk from the shell. 33 Class Crustacea • Class malacostraca - lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, crab, sowbug • Notable Features: Most have swimmarettes on the abdomen; usually 19 pair of appendages. First 13 being cephalothoracic and last 6 being abdominal; appendages on the cephalothorax are often chelate. Figure 33.9 Crustacean Diversity (Part 1) Figure 33.9 Crustacean Diversity (Part 2) 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Arthropods made the leap from aquatic to terrestrial environments during the Devonian, more than 400 million years ago. • The insects (phylum Hexapoda) • We will be looking at the Class Insecta. • Are the most prominent of the several groups that successfully colonized the terrestrial habitat. Insects are found in almost every freshwater and terrestrial environment. • About 1.4 million species of insects have been described. • These are believed to be only a small fraction of the total number living on Earth. 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Insects have three basic body parts: A head with a single pair of antennae attached A thorax with three pairs of legs attached An abdomen • To exchange gases with the environment, insects use air sacs and tubular channels called tracheae. Figure 33.11 Structure of an Insect 33 Order Thysanura • Order Thysanura - silverfish • Notable Features: Three caudal filaments; scales on body; very fast 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Insects that exhibit gradual changes between their instars are said to undergo incomplete metamorphosis. • Insects that exhibit dramatic changes between their instars are said to undergo complete metamorphosis. • The process in which a caterpillar changes into a butterfly is an example of complete metamorphosis. • In this process, a wormlike larva transforms itself during a specialized phase called the pupa. 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • The winged insects are divided into about 29 orders, with three major recognizable lineages: Winged insects that cannot fold their wings back against the body Winged insects that can fold their wings and that undergo incomplete metamorphosis Winged insects that can fold their wings and that undergo complete metamorphosis 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • The orders Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) and Ephemeroptera (mayflies) are the only surviving groups of the first lineage. • Members of these two orders have aquatic larvae that metamorphose into adults. • Dragonflies and damselflies are active predators as adults. • Adult mayflies lack functional digestive tracts and only live long enough to mate and lay eggs. Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 1) 33 Order Odonata • Order Odonata - dragonflies and damselflies • Notable Features: Two pair of similar wings. Well developed eyes. Long slender abdomen. Damselflies are fluttery fliers, and hold wings back when at rest; Dragonflies are strong fliers and hold their wings purpendicular to the body at rest 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Members of the second lineage have hatchlings that are similar in form to adults and acquire adult organ systems gradually through their instars. Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, roaches, mantids) Isoptera (termites) Plecoptera (stone flies) Dermaptera (earwigs) Thysanoptera (thrips) Hemiptera (true bugs) Homoptera (aphids, cicadas, leafhoppers) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 2) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 3) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 4) 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • Insects in the third lineage have life stages specialized for living in different environments and using different food sources. • Many species have larval stages that are specialized for feeding and growing, and adult stages specialized for reproduction and dispersal. Neuroptera (lacewings) Coleoptera (beetles) Trichoptera (caddisflies) Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths) Diptera (flies) Hymenoptera (sawflies, bees, wasps, ants) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 5) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 6) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 7) Figure 33.13 The Diversity of Insects (Part 8) 33 Insects: Terrestrial Descendants of Marine Crustaceans • “Winged” insects that do not belong in the above three lineages include two parasitic orders: the Phthiraptera (lice) and Siphonaptera (fleas). • Insects in these orders are descended from flying ancestors but have lost the ability to fly. • Molecular data suggest that the lineage leading to insects separated from the lineage leading to modern crustaceans about 450 million years ago. • The remarkable success of insects is due in part to their wings, which arose only once during insect evolution. Figure 33.14 Origin of Insect Wings 33 Arthropods with Two Body Regions • Whereas insects and most crustaceans have tripartite body plans, two arthropod lineages evolved a body plan with two regions, a head and a trunk. • The phylum Myriapoda includes the centipedes (Chilopoda) and millipedes (Diplopoda). • Centipedes have one pair of legs per trunk segment; millipedes have two pairs of legs per segment. • More than 3,000 centipede species and 10,000 millipede species have been described. Figure 33.15 Myriapods 33 Arthropods with Two Body Regions • There are 63,000 described species in the phylum Chelicerata, collectively referred to as the chelicerates. • Their bodies are divided into two major regions • The anterior region bears two pairs of appendages, modified to form mouthparts. • Many chelicerates also have four pairs of walking legs. 33 Arthropods with Two Body Regions • Chelicerate species are usually placed in three classes: Pycnogonida, Merostomata, and Arachnida. Figure 33.16 Minor Chelicerate Phyla (Part 1) 33 Class Arachnida • Class Arachnida - spiders and their allies • Notable Features: Cephalothorax and abdomen; no antennae; 10 pair of appendages, 4 pair of legs, one pair of pedipalpi, one pair of chelicerae; book lungs or trachea • Orders within the Class Arachnida • Order Scorpiones - scorpions • Notable Features: posterior terminates in a sting; pedipalps are long and chelate; usually nocturnal and remain concealed during the day; feed on insects and spiders 33 Class Arachnida • Order Araneae - true spiders • Notable Features: abdomen is unsegmented and attached to the cephalothorax by a slender pedicel; eyes are simple; spiders have poison glands, and ducts from these glands open near the tips of the chelicerae; pedipalps, located behind the chelicerae in front of the legs, are leglike or palplike; posterior end of the abdomen on the ventral side, are six finger-like structures called spinnerets • Order Opiliones - Harvestman spiders • Notable Features: body rounded or oval; generally two eyes; second pair of legs longest 33 Class Arachnida • Order Acari - mites and ticks • Notable Features: body oval and little differentiation between the two body regions; many are parasitic on vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants; many are scavengers • Order Pseudoscorpiones - pseeudoscorpions • Notable Features: seldom more than 5 mm in length; resemble true scorpions having large chelate pedipalps, but their is no sting; body is quite flat; feed on small insects which are caught with pedipalps 33 Class Arachnida • Order Solfugae - windscorpions, sunscorpions • Notable Features: arid or desert regions of the west; body slightly constricted in the middle; Very large chelicerae, but no venom glands; fast running and predacious, can even capture small lizards. 33 Arthropods with Two Body Regions • The spiders, scorpions, mites, and ticks are the most species-rich and abundant members of the class Arachnida. • The 30,000 described species of mites and ticks live in a variety of environments, including as parasites of plants, vertebrates, and invertebrates. Figure 33.17 Arachnid Diversity (Part 1) Figure 33.17 Arachnid Diversity (Part 2) 33 Arthropods with Two Body Regions • Spiders are important terrestrial predators. • Spiders produce protein threads from which they spin webs to snare prey and which they use to construct homes, safety lines for climbing, for mating structures, protection of developing young, and for dispersal. Figure 33.17 Arachnid Diversity (Part 3) Figure 33.17 Arachnid Diversity (Part 4) 33 Themes in the Evolution of Protostomes • Most protostome evolution took place in the oceans. • Some protostome lineages gradually evolved the ability to change their shape in complex ways and to move with greater speed as a result of subdivided body cavities that allowed better control of movement. • Many different lineages of animals evolved feeding structures designed to extract small prey from the water, most likely because this was the only type of food available during much of animal evolution. 33 Themes in the Evolution of Protostomes • Flowing water brings food with it. Thus, the sessile lifestyle evolved repeatedly during lophotrochozoan and ecdysozoan evolution. • The competition for space is a consequence of the sessile lifestyle, and many sessile animals have evolved mechanisms for overgrowing one another and engaging in toxic warfare when they come into contact. • Members of sessile colonies that are directly connected can share resources, an ability that enables some individuals to specialize for particular functions. 33 Themes in the Evolution of Protostomes • External body coverings probably evolved as a result of the selective pressures resulting from predation. • Body coverings evolved independently in many lophotrochozoan and ecdysozoan lineages. • The evolution of animals is, in one sense, a complex arms race among predators and prey, with each side developing structures and behaviors to deal with the selective pressures applied by the other. • Although greater complexity has evolved in many animal lineages, several lineages that have remained simple have been very successful. Table 33.1 Anatomical Characteristics of the Major Protostomate Phyla (Part 1) Table 33.1 Anatomical Characteristics of the Major Protostomate Phyla (Part 2)