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Zoology Ch. 14 Arthropods Arthropods and annelids are closely _____________ animals. _______________ arthropods are divided into _________ subphyla: Chelicerata, Crustacea, Hexapoda, and Myriapoda. __________ members of a fifth subphylum , Trilobitomorpha are ____________. _________________ are one of many groups of animals belonging to the phylum Arthropoda. Crayfish, ________________, spiders, mites, scorpions, and _______________ are also arthropods. Zoologists have described around ________ million species of arthropods with an estimated _________ to _________ million species yet to be described. Characteristics of Arthropoda include: 1. ___________________ modified by the specialization of body regions for specific ____________. 2. ______________ exoskeleton that provides support and protection and is modified to form __________ structures. 3. Paired, ______________ appendages. 4. Growth accompanied by _____________ or molting. 5. __________ nervous system 6. Coelom ____________ to cavities surrounding ______________ and sometimes excretory organs. 7. ____________ circulatory system in which blood is released into tissue spaces, _____________ derived from the blastocoel. 8. ______________ digestive tract. 9. _______________________ often present; reduces _________________ between immature and adult stages. Metamerism and Tagmatization ____________ aspects of arthropod biology have contributed to their success. One of these is _________________, which is most evident ______________ because the arthropod body is often composed of similar ______________, each having a pair of _________________. Internally, ___________ do not divide the body cavity of an arthropod, and most organs are not metamerically arranged. Metamerism _______________ the specialization of regions of the body for specific ____________. This regional specialization is called _________________________. In arthropods, body regions, called _______________, are specialized for ______________ and ________________ perception, locomotion, and visceral functions. The Exoskeleton The _____________ aspect for success is the external, jointed skeleton called the ____________________ or cuticle that encloses the arthropod. It provides structural ______________, protection, impermeable surfaces for the prevention of ____________ loss, and a system of levers for muscle ___________________ and ___________________. The exoskeleton has ________ layers. The _________________ is the outermost layer and is made of a waxy _______________, it is impermeable to water and a ________________ to microorganisms and pesticides. The bulk of the exoskeleton is below the epicuticle and is called the ________________. The procuticle is composed of ___________, a tough leathery polysaccharide, and several kinds of _______________. The ____________ of an arthropod would be impossible unless the exoskeleton were periodically ________, in a process called ___________. Ecdysis is divided into __________ stages: 1. ____________________ secreted from hypodermal glands begin _____________ the old procuticle to separate the hypodermis and the exoskeleton 2. __________ procuticle and epicuticle are secreted 3. the __________ exoskeleton _____________ open along predetermined ecdysal lines when the animal stretches by air or ____________ intake; _______ In the procuticle secrete additional epicuticle and 4. __________ ________________ deposits and or __________________ harden the new exoskeleton. The Hemocoel The __________ aspect of arthropod success is the presence of a ______________. The hemocoel is derived from an embryonic cavity called the _______________ that forms in the blastula. The hemocoel provides an ____________ cavity for the ___________ circulatory system of arthropods. Internal organs are bathed by ________________ fluids in the hemocoel to provide for the exchange of _____________, wastes, and sometimes gases. The ___________ which forms by splitting blocks of ________________ later in the development of most protostomes was reduced in ancestral arthropods. The presence of the ___________ exoskeleton and body wall means that the coelom is _______ longer used as a hydrostatic compartment. In modern arthropods, the coelom forms __________ __________ around the gonads. Metamorphosis The ____________ aspect of arthropod success is ______________ which has caused a ____________ of _____________ between adults and immature stages. Metamorphosis is a radical ______________ in body form and physiology as an ________________ stage, usually called a ____________, becomes an ___________. Subphylum Trilobitomorpha Members of the subphylum Trilobitomorpha were a _____________ form of life in the ____________ from the Cambrian period to the Carboniferous period. They __________ along substrate feeding on annelids, mollusks, and decaying organic matter. The trilobite was ___________, flattened, and divided into ____________ tagmata: _________, thorax, and pygidium. All body segments articulated so that the trilobite could ________ into a __________ to protect its soft ventral surface. Trilobite appendages consisted of ________ lobes or __________, and are all biramous appendages. The ________ lobe was a _____________ leg, and the _____________ lobe had ___________ or teeth that may have been used in digging or swimming or as ___________ in gas exchange. Subphylum Chelicerata This group of arthropods includes ____________, mites, ____________, horseshoe crabs, and sea spiders. These animals have __________ tagmata. The _____________ or __________________ is a sensory, feeding and locomotor tagma. It usually has __________, but unlike other arthropods, never has _______________. ____________ appendages attach to the Prosoma. The first pair, called _______________ are pincerlike and used for ________________. They may also be specialized as __________ ____________ for other functions. The second pair, called ______________, are usually for ___________ but may also be used in feeding, locomotion, or _______________. Paired _____________ legs follow pedipalps. Posterior to the prosoma is the _________________, which contains ______________, reproductive, ____________, and respiratory organs. Class Merostamata Members of the class Merostamata are divided into _________ subclasses. The Xiphosura are the _____________ _______, and the Eurypterida are the giant ____________ _________________. The later are _____________, having lived from the Cambrian period to the Permian period. Only _________ species of horseshoe crabs are living today. One species is known to exist in the _______________ Ocean and the ___________ of ________________. Horseshoe crabs _____________ sandy and muddy substrates for annelids, small mollusks, and other ______________. Their body form has remained ______________ for over ________ million years. The horseshoe crab prosoma is covered by a _______________. The chelicerae, pedipalps, and the first _____________ pairs of walling legs are _____________ and are used for walking and ____________ handling. The ________ pair of appendages has leaflike plates at their tips and are used for ______________ and digging. The _________________ of a horseshoe crab includes a long ________________ telson. The _________ pair of opisthosomal appendages cover genital pores and are called ____________ ______________. The remaining ______ pairs of appendages are ___________ ____________ for gas exchange. Horse shoe crabs are ______________. During reproductive periods ___________ and ____________ congregate in intertidal areas. The male ____________ the female and ___________ her with his pedipalps. The female excavates shallow _______________ in the sand, and as she sheds eggs into the depressions the male __________________ them. Fertilized eggs are ________________ with sand and develop unattended. Class Arachnida Members of the class Arachnida are some of the most _______________________ members of the animal kingdom. Their reputation as fearsome and grotesque creatures is very __________________, because the majority of spiders, mites, ticks, scorpions, etc. are either ________________ or very _______________ to humans. Most zoologists believe that arachnids arose from the __________________ and were early ________________ inhabitants. Form and Function Most arachnids are _____________________. They hold small arthropods with their ______________ while ____________ from the gut tract pour over the prey. Partially digested food is taken into the _____________. Others ___________ enzymes into prey through _____________ chelicerae and __________ partially digested animal tissue. The gut tract of arachnids is divided into ___________ regions. The anterior portion is the ______________, and the posterior portion is the __________. Both develop infoldings of the ______________ _________ and are lined with ____________. A portion of the __________ Is modified into a _______________ stomach and the hindgut is a site of ___________ reabsorption. Arachnids use ________ glands and/or _______________ tubules for ____________ nitrogenous wastes. Coxal glands are ___________, thin-walled spherical ________ bathed in the blood of body _____________. The nitrogenous wastes are _____________ across the wall of the sacs and transported to __________, and excreted through an excretory _____________ at the base of the posterior appendage. Arachnids in ________ environments use malpighian tubules to absorb waste materials from the __________ and empty them into the __________ tract. Excretory wastes are then eliminated with ________________ wastes. The major excretory product of arachnids is ___________ _________, which is a _____________ and has little water ________. Gas exchange also occurs with ___________ water loss because arachnids have few _____________ respiratory surfaces. Some arachnids have structures called __________ ____________, that are modifications of the book gills. Book lungs are ______ invaginations of the ____________ body wall that fold into a series of leaflike lamellae. Air enters the book lung through a slitlike opening and ______________ between the lamellae. Respiratory gases ____________ between the blood moving among the lamellae and the air in the lung chamber. Other arachnids have a series of ____________, chitinlined tubules that deliver air directly to body tissues. These tubule systems called _____________ open to the ______________ through openings called ________________ along the ventral side of the abdomen. The circulatory system of arachnids is an ______ system in which a _________ contractile vessel (heart) pumps blood into tissue ___________ of the hemocoel. Blood _____ the tissues and then returns to the dorsal ___________ through openings in the aorta called ________. Arachnid blood contains the dissolved respiratory pigment _________________ and has amoeboid cells that aid in ____________ and body defenses. The nervous system of all arthropods is ____________ and is laid out in a pattern similar to the _____________. With the exception of the ____________, the nervous system is centralized by the ______________ of _____________. The body of the arachnid has a variety of __________ structures. Most mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors are modifications of the ________________, such as projections, ____________, and slits, together with sensory and accessory cells. All together these are known as ___________. Examples of these structures include: __________ hairlike structures that initiate nerve impulses, _____________ receptors, spiders use ____________ to capture prey and the size to capture is determined by the vibrations of the insect. Chemical receptors stimulate ________ cells. Arachnids have _________ or more pairs of _________, which they use for detecting ____________ and ___________ in light intensity. Arachnids are ____________ with paired ____________ openings on the ventral side of the ____________ abdominal segment. Sperm transfer is __________ and the sperm is packaged in a spermatophore, then transferred to the ___________. Courtship rituals take place with individuals of the same ___________ by attraction to a female who is positioned to ___________ the spermatophore. _______________ does occur in some species where sperm is transferred via ___________. Development is ___________, and the young ___________ from eggs as _______________ adults. Order Scorpionida Members of the order Scorpionida are the __________________, which are common from _____________ to warm ______________ climates. Scorpions are ________________ and __________________, hiding during the day under logs and stones. Scorpions have a _______________ that is ______________ into a shield-like carapace, and small ___________ project anteriorly from the front of the carapace. They have a pair of posterior enlarged chelate _____________, and the opisthosoma is ________________. They have a preabdomen with __________ __________ and chemical receptors called ________________, and genital openings. They have a postabdomen or ____________ with a ___________ that contains ___________-producing glands. Prior to _________________, male and female scorpions have a period of courtship that lasts from _________ minutes to several hours. Male and female scorpions face each other and extend their ___________ high in the _______. The male seizes the female with his pedipalps, and they repeatedly walk ______________ and then _________________. The _____________ portion of the male reproductive tract forms a spermatophore that is __________ on the ground. During courtship the male ______________ the female so that the genital opening on her abdomen is positioned over the __________________. Downward ______________ of the female’s abdomen on a triggerlike structure of the spermatophore releases __________ into the female’s genital chamber. Most arthropods are _______________, females lay eggs that develop _____________ of the body. Many scorpions and some other arthropods are ___________________, development is ____________ and the yolk provides nourishment for development. Some scorpions are ______________, meaning that the mother provides nutrients to nourish the embryos. Eggs develop in the __________ in association with the digestive tract. Nutrients pass from the digestive tract to the embryo, where development requires up to _________ years, and _________ to ___________ young are brooded. After birth, the young ________ onto the mother’s __________ where they remain for up to a ____________. Order Araneae There are about _______________ species of order Araneae, the _____________ group of arachnids. The prosoma bears chelicerae with ____________ glands and __________. Pedipalps are leglike, and in males are modified for ____________ transfer. The ____________ anterior margin of the carapace usually has ________ to ___________ eyes. They have a _________ pedicel attached to the prosoma, and the abdomen is ____________ and contains openings to the reproductive tract, _________ __________, and trachea. It also has ___________ projections called ______________ associated with __________ glands. The protein that forms silk is emitted as a _______________, but ______________ as it is drawn out. Spiders produce different kinds of ___________ for different uses. Most spiders feed on _________ and other arthropods that they hunt and capture in ____________. Spiders bite their prey to ____________ them and then __________ them in their silk. They puncture the prey’s body wall and inject _____________. The spider’s _____________ stomach then ___________ predigested prey products into the spider’s ____________ tract. The ____________ of most spiders is ______________ to humans. _____________ widow and the __________ recluse spiders are exceptions with _______ venom to humans. Mating of spiders involves ______________ behaviors that include chemical, ___________ and/or visual signals. Females deposit chemicals called ___________________ on their webs or bodies to attract males. A male may attract a female by plucking the strands of a female’s __________. The pattern of plucking is species __________ and helps to identify and locate potential ________ and prevents the male spider from becoming the female’s next _________. The male has an ____________ that is a penislike structure that is inserted into the female’s reproductive opening and sperm are discharged. The female deposits up to __________________ eggs in a silken egg _______________, which she seals and attaches to webbing and then _____________ with her. Order Opiliones Members of the order Opiliones are the ____________ or daddy longlegs. The prosoma joins the opithosoma, and legs are very _________ and ___________. Most daddy longs legs are ______________, and other are strictly ___________. They seize prey with their __________ and ingest prey as other arachnids described before. Digestion is both _____________ and _____________. Sperm transfer is ___________ with the male penislike structure. Females have a tubular ______________ that projects from a sheath at the time of egg laying. Females deposit _____________ of eggs in ___________ locations on the ground. Order Acarina Members of the order Acarina are the __________ and _________. Many are ____________ on humans and domestic animals. Others are free-living in both _______________ and ______________ habitats. Of all arachnids, acarines have had the greatest impact on human __________ and welfare. Mites are ________mm or less in length. The prosoma and opisthosoma are __________ and covered by a _______________. An anterior ____________ carries mouthparts. Chelicerae are modified for ____________, biting, anchoring,and ______________, and adults have ________ pairs of walking legs. Free- living mites may be ______________ or scavengers. These mites damage ________________ products. Parasitic mites usually do not ____________ attach to their hosts, but __________ for a few hours or days and then drop to the ground. A few mites are ______________ ectoparasites. Itch mites cause scabies in humans and other animals by tunneling in the _____________ of the skin, eggs are deposited and ____________ of the mites irritate the skin, and ___________ occur. Ticks are ectoparasites during their __________ life. They may be up to _________ cm in length. Hooked mouthparts are used to attach to their hosts and to feed on ___________. Copulation occurs on the _________, and after feeding, females drop to the ground to __________ eggs. Eggs hatch into _____-_________ seed ticks that feed on host blood. Some ticks transmit _______________ to humans and domestic animals, like Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Class Pycnogonida Members of the class Pycnogonida are the __________ spiders. All are __________ and worldwide, but most common in ________ water. Pycnogonids live on the ocean __________ and feed on cnidarian polyps. Sea spiders feed by ___________ prey tissues through a proboscis or ______________ are prey with their first pair of appendages called __________________. Pycnogonids are _________________ with ______-shaped gonads that branch to the __________. As the female releases eggs, the male _____________ them, then ____________ them into a round mass and attaches them the appendages of the Male called _____________, where they brood until hatching. Subphylum Crustacea The subphylum Crustacea includes many different organisms such as _____________, shrimp, lobsters, crabs, copepods, cladocerans, fairy shrimp, isopods, amphipods, and _____________. Except for some isopods and crabs, all crustaceans are ______________. Crustaceans __________ from other living arthropods in _________ ways. They have ________ pairs of antennae, whereas all other arthropods have __________ pair or _________. Crustaceans possess ______________ appendages, each consists of a basal segment called the __________________, with two rami attached. The medial ramus is the _______________ and the lateral ramus is the _____________. Trilobites had ______________ structures which is evidence for close relation to ancestral crustaceans. There are _________ classes of crustaceans and many orders. Class Malacostraca Malacostraca is the _______________ class of crustaceans that includes _________, lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, mysids, shrimplike krill, isopods, and amphipods. The order ______________ is the ______________ order of crustaceans and includes shrimp, crayfish, _____________, and crabs. ____________ have a laterally compressed muscular abdomen and pleopods for _______________. Lobsters, crabs, and crayfish are adapted to ________________ on the surface of the substrate. The body of the crayfish is divided into ________ regions. The crayfish has a ________________, fused head and and chest which is anterior and a posterior ____________ or tail. Paired appendages are ____________ in _________ body regions. The first two pairs of cephalothoracic appendages are the first and second _______________. The third and fifth pairs of appendages are associated with the ____________. During crustacean evolution, the __________ pair of appendages became modified into chewing and grinding structures called ____________. The fourth and fifth pairs of appendages are for food handling and are called _______________. The sixth through the eighth appendages are called ______________________ and are accessory _____________ and food handling appendages. The _________ two pairs of maxillipeds have __________. Appendages __________ to _________ are thoracic appendages called ______________. The first periopod is the cheliped and enlarged pincer used for ________________. All but the last pair of appendages of the abdomen are called ______________ (swimmerets) used for swimming. In females developing eggs attach to the ________________ and the embryos are brooded until hatching. In males the ________ two pairs of pleopods are modified into gonopods used for __________ transfer during copulation. The abdomen ends in a median extension called the _____________. The telson bears the __________ and is flanked by the biramous appendage of the last segment called ____________. The telson and uropods are effective ____________ used in swimming and escape. Crayfish prey upon other invertebrates, eat __________ matter and scavenge __________ and ____________ animals. The foregut includes an enlarged _____________ which is used for ________________. A digestive gland secretes digestive _____________ and ______________ products of digestion. The midgut extends from the stomach and is called the __________. A short hindgut ends in an ___________ and is important in _________ and _________ regulation. Gills are in a branchial chamber, and oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged between ______________ and ____________ across the gill surfaces, and a respiratory pigment, ____________ carries oxygen in blood plasma. Circulation in crayfish is similar to that of most arthropods. Dorsal, anterior, and posterior arteries lead ___________ from a muscular __________. Branches of these vessels empty into ___________ of the hemocoel. Blood _______________ to the heart __________ in a ventral sinus and enters the gills before returning to the pericardial sinus, which ______________ the heart. Crustacean nervous systems show trends similar to those in ____________ and arachnids. Crayfish have supraesophageal and subesophageal __________ that receive sensory input from receptors in the ________ and control the head appendages. The ____________ nerves and segmental ganglia _________, and ___________ neurons in the ventral nerve cord function in __________ responses. In addition to antennae, the sensory structures of crayfish include __________ and ____________ eyes, statocysts, chemoreceptors, proprioceptors and tactile setae. Chemical receptors are distributed all over the appendages and __________. When a crustacean is crawling or resting, stretch receptors at the joints are _____________. The endocrine system of a crayfish controls functions such as ecdysis, ______ determination and color change. Endocrine glands release chemicals called _____________ into the blood, where they circulate and cause responses at certain ___________ tissues. The excretory organs of crayfish are called _________________ glands (green glands) because they are at the bases of the second antennae and are ____________. Excretory products form by the filtration of ___________. Ions, sugars, and amino acids are _________________ in the excretory tubule before the diluted ______________ is excreted. ____________ is the primary excretory product. Gill surfaces are also important in ______________ excretion and water and ion regulation. Crayfish and all other crustaceans except the ______________ are _____________. ___________ are in the dorsal portion of the thorax and gonoducts open at the base of the ___________ (____________) or ___________(_____________) periopods. Mating occurs just after a female has _____________. The male turns the female onto her ____________ and deposits nonflagellated sperm near the openings of the female gonoducts. Fertilization occurs after copulation as the eggs are _________. The eggs are __________ and fasten to the female’s pleopods. The development of crayfish embryos is _____________ with young hatching as miniature _________. Two other orders of malacostracans are the ____________ which include ___________. Isospods are dorsoventrally flattened and may be aquatic or terrestrial, and __________ decaying plant and animal material. Terrestrial isopods live under rocks and logs and in ___________ ____________. Members of the Amphipoda have a laterally compressed body that gives them a ________________ appearance. Amphipods move by ____________ or _____________ on their sides along the substrate. Some species burrow, climb or jump. Amphipods are _______________ and some are parasites. Class Branchiopoda Members of the class Branchiopoda live in _________________ and have flattened leaflike appendages used in ________________, filter feeding, and locomotion. Fairy shrimp and brine shrimp comprise the order Anostraca. Fairy shrimp usually live in temporary ____________ that spring thaws and rains form. Eggs are brooded and hen the female _______, and the temporary pond begins to __________, the embryos become _______________ in a resistant capsule. Embryos lie on the forest floor until the ponds ____________ again the following spring when they hatch into larva. Brine shrimp also form _____________ embryos and live in __________ lakes and ponds. Members of the order Cladocera are called _________ _________. A large _________ covers their bodies and they _____________ by repeatedly thrusting their __________ antennae downward to create a jerky upward locomotion. Females reproduce parthenogenitically in spring and summer and can _______________ populate a pond or lake. Eggs are brooded in an _________ _________, and at the next _________ the egg case is released and either floats or sinks. Class Maxillopoda Members of the class Maxillopoda are ___________ crustaceans that recognized by their __________ bodies and the unique combination of __________ head, ____________ thoracic, and ___________ abdominal segments plus a telson. Pentastomida is made up of ______________ of the _____________ passages of reptiles, birds and mammals. Subclass Copepoda Members of the subclass Copeopoda include some of the most ___________ marine and freshwater crustacean species. Copepods have a _____________ body, and the first antennae are modified for ________________, and the _____________ is free of appendages. Most copepods are planktonic and ________________ ____________________. Subclass Thecostraca The barnacles are members of the infraclass Cirripedia that _____________, and highly modified as adults. They are all __________ with about ________ thousand species. Most barnacles are _________________. Barnacles attach to a variety of substrates including _________, ship bottoms, whales, and other animals.