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Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005 Chapter 19 – Phylum Arthropoda, Subphylum Crustacea Introduction to Crustaceans 42,000 species Crabs, shrimps, lobsters, and barnacles Important ecologically • Zooplankton Mainly marine, but some FW and a few terrestrial varieties Mandibulates, along with myriapods and insects Two pairs of antennae Body Form Two tagma in most Two pairs of antennae • 1st and 2nd antennae Mandibles Two pairs of maxillae • 1st and 2nd maxillae Lateral compound eyes • Often on eyestalks Pereopods • Walking legs Pleopods • Swimmerets Uropods • Make up tail fin Exoskeleton typically mineralized • Calcified Nutrition and Digestive System Many strategies; feed on suspended particles, detritus, carrion, plants and/or animals Possess several mouthparts • Usually have gnathobases • Coxae of appendages forms a food groove Many use a structure called a setal comb to filter feed • Often located on feeding appendages Most have J – shaped gut Often have a grinding stomach called a gastric mill Midgut has digestive ceca termed the hepatopancreas Intestines form and remove wastes • Also reclaim water Anus located at base of telson Other Organ Systems Small species don’t require complex organ systems Hemal • Typical of arthropods • Hemocyanin or hemoglobin dissolved in plasma Respiratory • Gills located in branchial chamber • Inhalant and exhalant chambers • Gill bailer (scaphognathite) ventilates • Many strategies for cleaning gills and removing sediment from branchial chamber Excretory system • Paired saccate nephridia Located in segment with 2nd antennae or 2nd maxillae Called antennal, maxillary, or green glands Nephridiopores open near 2nd antennae/maxillae Most marine species are osmoconformers Freshwater species are osmoregulators Ammonotelic, so nitrogen diffuses across gills Nervous system is typical of arthropods • Eyes Often compound with as many as 14,000 ommatidia Often at the end of a movable eyestalk, which greatly increases the field of view Some can distinguish colors • Many use chromatophores to match color of surroundings • Statocysts and chemosensors Often associated with antennae Animals frequently clean their antennae Reproduction All but barnacles are gonochoric Usually copulation with internal fertilization Penis or gonopods transfer sperm Appendages such as 2nd antennae are often used to grasp female Sometimes males cannot mate with females until after she molts Most brood eggs attached to appendages or in brood chambers Direct or indirect (nauplius larva) development Class Anostraca Fairy shrimp and brine shrimp (sea monkeys) Live in ephemeral pools • Typically saline • Lack fishes 15 – 30 mm, but some grow as large as 10 cm Lack carapace Sexually dimorphic • Males have large 2nd antennae for grasping females Stalked compound eyes Possess setal combs for suspension feeding Swim upside down Many tolerate a wide range of salinities Sperm transfer is direct • Internal fertilization Class Phyllopoda 800 species Inhabit freshwater habitats that are similar to those of anostracans Two main types • Large - tadpole shrimps • Small - water fleas Tadpole Shrimps Triops is most famous genus • Ten species altogether Enormous shield-like carapace covers most of the animal Most are small, but some reach 10 cm in length Amazing physiology • Dr. Carl Reiber’s lab has conducted research using Triops as a model • Survive in hypoxia and anoxia Hemoglobin subunit recruitment • Produce two types of eggs Summer eggs- thin shelled and hatch rapidly Winter eggs - undergo diapause Water Fleas Also called cladocerans • Daphnia is most famous genus Often live in ponds and lakes where they make up a large portion of FW zooplankton community Swim using enlarged 2nd antennae as oars Undergo cycles of parthenogenesis and bisexual reproduction Typically brood eggs Two types of eggs produced Undergo cyclomorphosis • Seasonal changes in morphology • Head shape, spines, neck teeth produced • Evidence suggests these changes are inducible responses Class Malacostraca Many important orders of crustaceans Crabs, crayfish, and shrimps 23,000 species Tagmatization is standardized Order Stomatopoda 300 species of mantis shrimps Predators of fish, crabs, shrimps, and molluscs Raptorial claws are extended and retracted rapidly to capture prey Best developed compound eyes of any crustacean • Some even have depth perception 5 cm – 36 cm long Can be brightly colored Many live in burrows Often pair up with one mate for life Squilla is most famous genus Order Decapoda 10,000 species of shrimps, crayfishes, lobsters, and crabs Important ecologically and economically All have 10 legs, hence the name Shrimp-like Decapods Laterally compressed Thin flexible exoskeleton (uncalcified) Muscular abdomen that can be used for escaping (tail flip) Large pleopods for swimming Benthic Penaeus is a common genus Snapping shrimp • Synalpheus • Has one extremely large cheliped • One movable finger is cocked • When released the force generated can stun prey or crack a clam shell • Also makes a loud noise Lobster-like Decapods More dorsoventrally flattened Heavier legs Chelipeds Muscular abdomen • Tail flips • Small pleopods Homarus and Procambarus are famous genera Crab-like Decapods Most dorsoventrally compressed of the three groups Abdomen is greatly reduced • Hermit crabs have a large abdomen that is soft and is housed in a shell • Periodically need to find larger shells Typically walk sideways Some like Callinectes can swim Eggs brooded between the cephalothorax and abdomen Types of crabs: • Alaskan king Probably the largest crab • Mole crabs Lack chelipeds Burrow in sand Japanese spider crab • Greatest leg span of any arthropod Decorator crabs • Have hooked setae • Attach things to its exoskeleton • Aids in protection and camouflage Dungeness crab • Cancer magister • Probably the most popular food crab Freshwater Decapods Crayfish • The most successful with 400 species, worldwide • Many live under stones and some burrow • Procambarus is an invasive species in Western US Shrimps • Most are tropical • A few species in the US Crabs • Usually must return to the sea at some point to release larvae • Chinese mitten (or river) crab is an invasive in CA Terrestrial Crabs Adapted for life on land • Morphological adaptations Gills converted into a modified lung Uricotelic • Behavioral “adaptations” Typically live near oceans or in other high humidity habitats Visit water to wet body and respiratory surfaces Typically burrow and are nocturnal Some brood embryos on land and make mass migrations to release larvae Terrestrial hermit crabs (Coenobita) Coconut crabs (Birgus) • Climb trees and open coconuts, which they eat • Drink sea water • Can reach one meter in length • Some can lift 28 kg Christmas Island red crabs • Make mass migrations from forests to the sea every year to mate Fiddler crabs are considered semiterrestrial Uca lives on sand or mud beaches or in mangrove swamps Emerge from burrows when the tide is out • Foraging • Mating • Fighting Dependent on tide to bring new food and remove wastes The Decapod Hemal System Heart is not tubular • Rectangular with three pairs of ostia Well developed vasculature • Seven major arteries leaving heart McGaw and Reiber have studied many parameters of decapod circulation Circulation takes around 40 sec in large species Hemocyanin transports around 90% of oxygen Neurosecretory Organs of Decapods Eyestalks are the most important neurosecretory organs Hormones synthesized in neuron cell bodies of eyestalk control: • Molting • Chromatophores • Reproduction Sinus gland in eyestalk stores and releases hormones into blood There are a few endocrine organs outside of nervous system, but these are under nervous control • Y-organ Secretes ecdysone Located in anterior cephalothorax Chromatophores Located in connective tissue, deep to the epidermis Color change is apparent in areas where the cuticle is thin or transparent Used for: • Thermoregulation – blanching in fiddler crabs • Concealment – many shrimps change color to match surroundings Astaxanthin is a carotenoid pigment found in decapods • Is blue in live animals, because it is bound with a protein • Boiling denatures the protein and the animal turns red Decapod Reproduction Copulation • Hermit crabs have to partially exit shell Sperm transfer is indirect • Spermatophore extruded from penes, onto gonopods • Transferred by gonopods Most anterior pair of pleopods, that are modified Aquatic species attract each other using pheromones • Tactile cues are also important Visual and sometimes auditory cues are important to terrestrial species • Combat between male fiddler crabs Egg mass is known as a sponge, and is brooded on pleopods Autotomy Limbs occasionally get autotomized (removed) • Predators • Self amputation Little bleeding Limb bud forms • New limb regenerates inside Limb bud unfolds during next molt • Removing a limb bud delays molting until a new bud forms and limb is regenerated Class Malacostraca, Order Euphausiacea 85 species of krill Pelagic, shrimp-like animals found throughout oceans Small (about 3 cm long), but found in enormous densities • 60,000 / m3 Chief food for many marine animals • Blue whale may consume four tons per day Bioluminescence functions in schooling and courtship behaviors Can rapidly molt and leave exuvia behind as decoys Order Amphipoda 6000 species of scuds • Gammarus is most famous genus Small (5 – 15 mm) • Giant Pacific scuds can reach 28 cm and live 5300 m deep Some FW species, and some semi-terrestrial such as beach hoppers • Can leap many times body length Laterally compressed Order Isopoda 4000 species Mostly marine Pill bugs (wood lice) are the most successful terrestrial crustaceans Most are 5 -15 mm, but the deep sea isopod (Bathynomus) reaches 42 cm Dorsoventrally compressed Nutritional strategies • Some bore into wood • Some are carnivorous • Some parasitize fishes Have enrollment muscles (pill bugs) Terrestrial species specialized structures to collect water and channel it to gills Class Copepoda 12,000 species Most marine, but FW varieties dominate zooplankton communities Some are parasitic Free-living varieties are small (1 17 mm), but some parasites reach 25 cm Long first antennae • Used by males to grasp females • Usually branch 90° angles, relative to longitudinal axis Possess a median nauplius eye Form oil droplets for buoyancy, which can lead to petroleum deposits Some undergo DMV of around 300 m • One researcher figured out that this is the greatest movement of biomass on the planet Famous genera: • Cyclops • Tisbe Swarm on small fish and eat at their fins After fish is immobilized, it is devoured Class Cirripedia Barnacles Secrete and inhabit a rigid calcareous shell that is capable of growth Sessile animals that encrust on rocks, timber, ships, and even whales Fouling ability is amazing • May reduce speed and fuel efficiency of a ship by 30% Abundant intertidally, and may be found in distinct patters of zonation • Due to interspecific competition Larvae settle and cements to substrate using glands on its head • Ventral aspect is up • Six pairs of cirri on thorax are used for filter feeding Hermaphroditic • Highly extensible penis deposits sperm in a neighboring barnacle Calcareous shell is secreted by exoskeleton There are two pairs of ventral, movable calcareous plates that form an operculum • Scuta – anterior plates • Terga – posterior plates Muscles control aperture diameter Ecdysis occurs but calcareous shell / plates aren’t shed Shell is added on to with new secretions Diversity • Acorn barnacles Balanus Those on West coast of South America can be 23 cm high, 8 cm wide, and are eaten locally • Stalked barnacles Have a peduncle and capitulum Lepas can grow to 75 cm in height Some do not produce shells • Bore into rocks Others parasitize crabs • Barnacles alter crab’s behavior, physiology, and anatomy Molting suppressed Reproduction suppressed, in fact most are sterilized Male crabs become feminized and develop a larger female abdomen, into which barnacle places its own brood pouch • Betters suits the barnacle’s needs Class Ostracoda 6000 species of seed shrimps that resemble miniature clams • Have a bivalved carapace 0.25 – 25 mm (Gigantocypris) Some have cephalic silk glands and spinnerets that secrete silk threads used for: • Draglines • Building shelters for molting Carapace is an extension of head • Is shed with each molt Some have bioluminescence • Bluish light • Flashed for periods of 1 to 2 seconds • Used to attract mates Class Branchiura 200 species of fish lice Ectoparasites of marine and FW fishes, and tadpoles 5 – 30 mm in length Structural adaptations for attaching to host • First antennae have claws • Mandibles are toothed • First maxillae are suckers Produce digestive enzymes to erode host tissue, and feed on blood and mucus Infestations in fish farms can eradicate entire populations