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Chapter TwentySeven

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Title: Chapter TwentySeven


1
Chapter Twenty-Seven
  • The Animal Kingdom III
  • Arthropods Part II

2
The Terrestrial Mandibulates Myriapods
  • Many-footed
  • Single pair of antennae
  • Mandibles
  • Respire through tracheae
  • Excretion by way of Malpighian tubules

http//www.brookview.karoo.net/Sellafield_Zoo/Bear
s/Bear_with_many_feet.jpg
3
Myriapods -Classes Chilopoda Diplopoda
  • Class Chilopoda (centipedes) Diplopoda
    (millipedes) are most familiar myriapods
  • Prefer damp area and are carnivorous feeding on
    other insects however, millipedes are
    herbivorous and feed on decaying vegetation
  • Centipede-one pair of appendages on each body
    segment
  • Millipede-two pairs of appendages per body segment

http//donaxtell.home.att.net/jamaica/2002/centipe
de.jpg
4
Myriapods Classes Pauropoda Symphyla
  • 300 species of Class Pauropoda
  • 130 species of Class Symphyla
  • Unlike other arthropods, they are soft-bodied,
    living in moist soil, leaf litter, and other
    decaying matter
  • Although both classes are abundant, they are
    quite small and they usually go about unnoticed
    by the human eye

5
The Terrestrial Mandibulates Class Insecta
  • Largest class of arthropods, in fact more than
    70 of all animal species are insects
  • Only invertebrates capable of flight
  • Four largest orders
  • Diptera two-winged
  • Lepidoptera scale-winged
  • Hymenoptera membrane-winged
  • Coleoptera shield-winged

http//www.anatomorphex.com/picts/animals/AN040_FL
YING_BEETLE.jpg
6
Insect Characteristics
  • Three body regions head, thorax, abdomen
  • Three pairs of legs
  • One pair of antennae
  • Set of complex mouthparts used for many different
    things
  • Most adult insects have two pairs of wings made
    up light, strong sheets of chitin

http//www.enchantedlearning.com/ggifs/Grasshopper
_bw.GIF
7
Digestive, Excretory, and Respiratory Systems
  • The stomach, or midgut, which lies mainly in the
    abdomen, is the chief organ of absorption
  • Excretion is carried out through Malpighian
    tubules
  • To promote water conservation, nitrogenous wastes
    are eliminated in the form of dry crystals of
    uric acid
  • The respiratory system consists of a network of
    cuticle-lined tubules through which air
    circulates to the various tissues of the body,
    supplying each cell directly

8
Insect Life Histories
  • Most biological function of larvae seems to be
    the invasion and selection of new habitats at
    some distance from the parental habitat
  • Insect young are voracious feeders
  • In many insects, some degree of parental care has
    evolved, with one or both parents protecting and
    feeding the young, or both
  • Young growing insects change not only in size but
    often in form, a phenomenon known as
    metamorphosis
  • Immature, nonreproductive forms are known as
    nymphs
  • In 90 of insect species, a complete
    metamorphosis occurs, and the adults are
    drastically different from the immature forms, or
    larvae

9
Insect Life Histories
  • Complete metamorphosis occurs in four different
    forms(1)the egg or embryo,(2)larva, (3)pupa,
    (4)adult
  • Stages between molts are know as instars
  • This metamorphosis is the famous transition from
    caterpillar to butterfly
  • Molting and metamorphosis are under the control
    of hormones, which are organic molecules secreted
    by one tissue of an organism that regulate the
    functions of another tissue or organ of the same
    organism

http//www.wcer.wisc.edu/NCISLA/MUSE/naturalselect
ion/materials/section4/lesson4A/handouts/usgs1.jpg
10
Arthropod Success
  • Nature of exoskeleton which waterproofs, provides
    protection, makes possible for evolution of
    specialized appendages
  • Small size and the high specificity of diet
  • Complete metamorphosis that occurs in the vast
    majority of insect species
  • Arthropod nervous system, with control of carious
    appendages and sensory organs

http//www.zadams.com/vita/photographs/despair/suc
cess.jpg
11
Arthropod Senses and Behavior The Compound Eye
  • Basic structural unit of this eye is the
    ommatidium, repeated over and over
  • Light sensitive portion of ommatidium is the
    rhabdom, which is the central core of the
    ommatidium
  • Although the compound eye is deficient in acuity,
    offering less detail than the vertebrate eye, it
    is better for detecting motion because each
    ommatidium is stimulated separately and so has a
    separate visual field (very important adaptation
    for flight)
  • In addition to, or instead of, compound eyes,
    many of the arthropods possess simple eyes, or
    ocelli, which seem generally to serve only for
    light detection.

12
Touch Receptors
  • Body surfaces of terrestrial arthropods are often
    covered with sensory-receptor units known as
    sensilla or little sense organs
  • In addition to being stimulated by direct
    contact, they can also be stimulated by
    vibrations and air currents

http//www.holyhacker.com/images/michaelangelo-cre
ation_hand.jpg
13
Proprioceptors
  • Proprioceptors are sensory receptors that provide
    information about the position of various parts
    of the body and the stresses and strains on them
  • Touch receptors can also serve as proprioceptors,
    like praying mantis do

http//www.1000plus.com/Hbirds/01092220DSBG20Pra
ying20Mantis20.JPG
14
Communication by Sound
  • Arthropods, particularly insects, have developed
    complex forms of communication
  • Five distinct types of calls are known(1)calling
    by males,(2)calling by females,(3)courtship
    sounds by males,(4)aggressive sounds by males,
    and (5)alarm sounds
  • Recognition of and response to the sound may be
    based on its pattern, rhythm, or frequency (pitch)

http//highroad.org/ranch20images/Insects/cricket
-grey.jpg
15
Communication by Pheromones
  • Many insects communicate by chemicals known as
    pheromones. These chemical messengers are
    discharged into the environment, where they act
    on other members of the same species
  • Among the best studied pheromones are the mating
    substances of moths
  • Female gypsy moths, by emission of minute amounts
    of a pheromone commonly known as disparlure, can
    attract male moths that are several kilometers
    downwind.
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