Download Arachnid & crustacean 2012-2013

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Subphylum Chelicerata
• Horseshoe crabs,
spiders, ticks, mites,
scorpions
1
Subphylum Chelicerata (cont’d)
• Cephalothorax (prosoma)
– Fused head and thoracic region
– Sensory, feeding, locomotion
• Abdomen (opisthosoma)
– contains digestive,
reproductive, excretory, and
respiratory organs
2
Subphylum Chelicerata (cont’d)
• Appendages attached to cephalothorax
– Pair of chelicerae (pincer-like feeding appendages)
– Pair of pedipalps (usually sensing or feeding)
– four pairs of legs (5 in horseshoe crabs)
3
Subphylum Chelicerata (cont’d)
• Usually has eyes
• Never has antennae
• Most suck liquid food from prey
mite
4
Class Merostomata
• Two subclasses:
– Xiphosura (horseshoe crabs)
• Covered by carapace
• Have chelicerae, pedipalps, 3 pairs walking
legs, & 1 pair digging legs
• book gills to obtain oxygen from sea water
– Euryptida (giant water scorpions) --extinct
5
Class Arachnida
• Spiders, ticks, scorpions
• Most are predators
• Most harmless to humans
Order Araneae
6
Class Arachnida (cont’d)
Special features to know:
• Use coxal glands and/or Malpighian tubules
for nitrogenous waste/excretion
• Have book lungs (folds of body wall to form
lungs)
• Air intake tubes: trachaea, which open to
outside via spiracles
7
Class Arachnida (cont’d)
Special features to know, continued:
• Sensory structures: sensilla
• Dioecious (separate male/female individuals)
8
Class Arachnida (cont’d)
• Some ticks and mites spread disease, cause
irritation
Dust mite
mite
9
Class Arachnida (cont’d)
• Lyme disease
– Caused by tick
tick
10
Order Scorpionida
• The Scorpions
Scorpion
– Prosoma fused into shield-like carapace
– Opisthoma contains digestive & reproductive
organs
– Oviparous: lay eggs that develop and hatch
outside the body
– Pedipalps and chelicerae
– Posterior stinger
• Only a few scorpions are toxic to humans
» Found in Northern Africa and Mexico, Arizona, New
Mexico
11
Order Araneae
(the spiders)
• Some spiders (ie. black widow, brown recluse
spider) give painful, dangerous bites
• Know how to identify them!
Brown recluse has “violin”
mark on dorsal side of prosoma
Black widow
Black widow has red “hourglass” on
ventral surface of opisthoma
Brown recluse
12
Spiders
• Prosoma: anterior segment
• Opisthoma: posterior segment
13
Spiders (cont’d)
• All predaceous
– Mostly insects
• Chelicerae may have fangs
14
Prey capture among the spiders
• Some species are
cursorial predators
– stalk and ambush their
prey (trap door spider)
– they usually have welldeveloped eyes
15
Jumping spider
Prey capture among the spiders
(cont’d)
• Some are web-building
spiders
– Eyes not as well
developed
– sensory hairs for
detecting vibrations
Grass spider
16
• Many spiders (and mites) producing silk
– Used for trapping prey, building nests, forming
egg cases
17
18
• silk glands that open to the exterior part
of the abdomen through spinnerets
spinnerets
19
• Spider venom is used
to subdue prey
• Venom liquifies tissues
with a digestive fluid
• Spider sucks up soupy
prey (ewwww!)
Wolf spider
20
Spiders: Class Araneae
Spider love…..
• Spiders, like most arthropods, are
dioecious
• Mating habits
– Pheromones- chemicals that elicit behavioral
change
– Rituals- males pluck female’s web (pattern is
species-specific)
21
Spiders: Class Araneae
• Male builds small web, deposits sperm
– Collects sperm in cavities of pedipalps
– Pedipalps have ejaculatory duct + embolus
– inserts pedipalps into female genital opening
22
Spiders: Class Araneae
• Eggs laid in silk case
– Carried, attach to web, bury
Wolf spider preparing egg sac
23
A lycosid (wolf spider) preparing egg sac
M. C. Barnhart24
M. C. Barnhart25
M. C. Barnhart
26
M. C. Barnhart27
Wolf spider parental care- after
the eggs hatch, the young ride on
mom for several days.
28
Crustaceans
29
The Crustaceans
lobsters
• Phylum Arthropoda
– Subphylum Crustacea
• crusta= shell
• Lobster, crayfish,
shrimp, crab, water
flea, barnacles
Daphnia
shrimp
crabs
amphipods
amphipods
euphausids
(krill)
30
The Crustaceans (cont’d)
lobsters
• Aquatic (mostly marine)
– a few terrestrial forms
• Major ecological and
economical importance.
shrimp
amphipods
euphausids
(krill)
31
• Biramous appendages (at least primitively)
– 2 main branches
32
• Only arthropods with 2 pairs of antennae
33
• Great specialization of appendages
– Mouthparts chewing, grinding, handling
34
– appendages strengthened for walking or
protection (chelipeds, pincer-like claws)
cheliped
walking legs
35
• Like other arthropods (+ unlike annelids),
coelom is highly reduced
• Major body cavity is hemocoel (contains
colorless blood)
36
Respiration
– gills (usually)
37
• Compound eye is typical of phylum
38
What’s the difference between
a crayfish and a lobster?
• Same Order, but different
families
• Lobsters are bigger
• Lobsters are marine; crayfish live
in freshwater creeks, ditches, or
lakes
crayfish
lobster
39
Brine Shrimp (Artemia salina)
• cosmopolitan
• restricted to highly saline lakes
and evaporation basins
• Dormant cysts= encased embryo
40
Barnacles
“nothing more than a little shrimplike animal standing
on its head in a limestone house and kicking food
into its mouth”
-Louis Agassiz
41
Barnacles
• living and nonliving substrates
• most species secrete CaCO3 shell
• Head reduced, rudimentary abdomen
42
Krill
• Component of plankton
• Major food for whales
43