arthropods: the marine bio version (chapter 5) phylum arthropoda largest and most successful phylum...

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Arthropods: The Marine Bio Version (chapter 5)

Phylum Arthropoda Largest and most successful phylum in the

animal kingdom. 75% of all animals! Exoskeleton made of Chitin (light/hard

polysaccharide). Must molt or shed exoskeleton to grow Jointed Appendages. Cephalization-compound eyes, ocelli

(eyespots), antennae. Segmented Bilateral symmetry

Classification you should know (there is a LOT more)

Subphylum Mandibulata Class crustacea

Order decapoda- lobsters

Subphylum Chelicerata Class meristomata- horseshoe crabs

Subphylum Uniramia (not elaborating)

Insects, millipeds, and centipedes

SUBPHYLUM MANDIBULATATA

Antennae, Mandibles & Maxillae Crustaceans-add some limestone to the

chitinous exoskeleton. Lobsters & crabs are the giants of this group-

most are a few centimeters long.

Class Crustacea

Shrimps, crabs, lobsters 2 pairs of antennae-sense

surroundings Dominant arthropods in sea (as

insects are on land) Appendages to swim, crawl,

attach, mate, feed

Crustaceans

lobsters & crabs, shrimp, copepods and barnacles.

rigid exoskeleton, crustaceans must “molt” or shed their shell in order to grow.

use an enzyme to split their shell & then crawl out.

molting horseshoe crab!

1) Small Crustaceans

Copepods- extremely abundant, planktonic, filter feed

Barnacles- usually sessile, filter feed, body enclosed by calcareous plates

Krill- planktonic, shrimp-like, have carapace to cover anterior, filter feed

the life of a Krill

2) Larger Crustaceans-Decapods: shrimps, lobsters, and crabs

Five pairs of legs, first pair are claws

Carapace encloses cephalothorax (anterior region)

(posterior region) is abdomen

Shrimps and Lobsters

Long abdomens (tails we eat) Scavengers for food Lobsters prey on mollusks

Hermit Crabs

Not true crabs Scavengers Hide abdomens in empty shells

True Crabs

Small abdomen and tucked under cephalothorax

V-shape ab. in males U-shape ab. in females Largest and most diverse of

decapods Scavengers and predators

Male Jonah Crab

Female Jonah Crab

Feeding Observe feeding appendages at work!

Maxillipeds- appendages near mouth (decapods have 3 pairs)

Food passes to stomach w/ teeth for grinding

Digestive glands w/ enzymes Intestine leads to anus Nutrients distributed through open

circulatory system

Response (nervous)

Well developed sense organs Compound eyes (opposite of

simple-14,000 sensitive units) Keen sense of smell Body postures/movements to

communicate w/ each other Simple brain

Compound Eyes- one way to respond to your environment- be able to see what is nearby!

Reproduction

Separate sexessexual reproduction

Males directly transfer sperm to females

Ex. Barnacle stretches out appendage to local females

Mating occurs after female molts

SUBPHYLUM CHELICERATA

Fang-like mouthparts (Chelicerae)-Pedipalps for sense. 2 Classes.

Class Merostomata-Horseshoe crabs.

Book gills on ventral surface

More closely related to spiders than crabs!

Horseshoe Crab

1. Carapace 2. Telson 3. Compound eye 4. Anterior spine Five pair of legs

LAB WORK:

DISSECTING A CRAYFISH

Virtually same structure as a lobster or shrimp, but has a better size than shrimp, and a better price than lobster!

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