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Arthropods Phylum Arthropoda Make up largest phylum of Animals, with more than 1 million known species. Of all animals on earth 3/4 are arthropods. Largest group insects. (on land) Largest group in oceans (crustaceans). Crustaceans (Subphylum Crustacea) Includes barnacles, shrimps, lobsters, and crabs. Bodies are segmented and bilaterally symmetrical. Body has jointed appendages, such as legs and mouthparts moved by muscles. Have exoskeleton made of chitin for protection, support, flexibility, muscle attachment. Lobster (ventral view) To grow arthropods molt. Molt- shed their exoskeleton. New shells develop under the old shell. After old shell is molted the new shell hardens. This limits size of arthropods. 68,000 species of crustaceans, most are marine. Specialized for life in water by having gills for obtaining oxygen, exoskeleton, appendages for swimming, crawling, and attachment for feeding and mating. Have two antennae for sensing surroundings. Small Crustaceans Copepods- abundant and important in the plankton. Use mouth parts to filter or capture food. Use elongated antennae to swim. Many are parasitic. Copepod Barnacles Filter feeders that live attached to surfaces including on whales and crabs. Are fouling organisms. Look like molluscs because their bodies are enclosed in calcareous plates. Have feathery, filtering legs to sweep in the water. Amphipods Have curved body that is flattened sideways. Head and tail curve downwards. Beach hoppers are strong jumpers by stretching their curved bodies. Others crawl among seaweeds, or burrow in skin of whales (whale lice). Amphipod Isopods Main part of body has legs that are similar to each other and are dorsoventrally flattened. Pill bugs are common on land. Fish lice are parasites of fishes and crustaceans. Fish louse on fish eyeball. Krill (Euphausiids) Planktonic, shrimp-like. Head is fused with body segments to form a distinctive carapace that covers the body like armor. Most are filter feeders of diatoms and plankton. Exclusive source of food for whales, penguins, and fishes. Krill Shrimps, Lobsters, and Crabs 10,000 species. Decapods- ten legs. Largest crustacean group. Largest crustaceans in size. Prized food source. Body Structure Have five pairs of legs (pereopods). First pair of legs is usually heavier and has claws for feeding and defense. Three sets of maxillipeds close to mouth to sort out food and push toward the mouth. Have cephalothorax- fused head and thorax. Rest of body is the abdomen. Shrimps and lobsters have laterally compressed bodies with elongated abdomens “tails”.. Shrimps are scavengers feeding on detritus. Larry the Lobster Hermit crabs- not true crabs are scavengers. Hide long, soft abdomens in empty gastropod shells. True Crabs Abdomen is small and tucked under broad cephalothorax. V-shaped abdomen in males. U-shaped abdomen in females for carrying eggs. Highly mobile move sideways “sidle”. Most are scavengers or predators. Mr. Krabs Alaskan King Crab Feeding and Digestion Filter feeding common on copepods and small crustaceans. Stiff, hair-like bristles are used to catch food particles in the water. Appendages used to pierce and suck in parasitic copepods and isopods. Food passes to a stomach with chitinous teeth for grinding and sifting. Stomachs are connected to digestive glands that secrete digestive enzymes and absorb nutrients. Intestine ends in an anus. Nutrients absorbed by an open circulatory system. Gas exchange carried out by gills. Crabs have gill chamber filled with air like our lungs. Nervous System and Behavior Simple crustaceans have a ladder-like nervous system. Have a small,relatively simple brain but well-developed sensory organs. Most have compound eyes with 14,000 light sensors. Decopods have eyes on the end of movable stalks like periscopes. Have keen sense of smell. Many have statocysts for balance. Behaviorally complex and use a variety of signals to communicate. Behaviors used to settle disputes, and for courtship. Reproduction and Life History Most are separate sexes. Males use specialized appendages to transfer sperm directly to the female. Hermaphrodites even transfer sperm between each other. Barnacles have a penis that can stretch to reach others in the neighborhood. Mating usually takes place after the female molts while the exoskeleton in soft. Females store sperm to fertilize different batches of eggs. In decapods the eggs are carried in Pleopods (swimmerets) beneath the body. Horseshoe Crabs Class Merostomata Not true crabs but “living fossils” Live on soft bottoms in shallow water on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of North America and South East Asia. Horseshoe-shaped carapace that encloses body with five pairs of appendages. Horseshoe Crabs Sea Spiders Class Pycnogonida Have four or more pairs of jointed legs Large proboscis with the mouth at the tip used to feed on soft invertebrates such as anemones and hydrozoans. Common in cold waters. Sea Spider Insects (Class Insecta) Have only three pairs of legs as adults. Most diverse on earth but rare in the sea. Most marine insects live at water’s edge where they scavenge sea weeds, barnacles, and rocks. Marine Water Strider