Title: Phylum Arthropoda
1Phylum Arthropoda
- The Arthropoda (from the Greek Arthron, joint and
podus, foot) are the largest group of organisms
and they occur in all environments on earth. - The group includes spiders, ticks, mites,
centipedes, millipedes, crustaceans, insects and
others.
2Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Bilaterally symmetrical with a segmented
(metameric) body divided into head, thorax and
abdomen cephalothorax and abdomen or fused head
and trunk.
3Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Jointed appendages. Primitively one pair per
segment, but number often reduced. - Appendages often greatly modified for specialized
tasks.
4Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Exoskeleton of cuticle.
- Exoskelton secreted by underlying epidermis. Made
of chitin, protein, lipid and often calcium
carbonate. - Exoskeleton is shed periodically (ecdysis) as the
organism grows.
5Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Muscular system is complex and muscles attach to
the exoskeleton. - Striated muscles for voluntary movement and
smooth muscles for the viscera. - Coleom is reduced. Most of body cavity is a
hemocoel (sinuses or spaces) filled with blood.
6Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Complete digestive system. Mouthparts are
specialized being modified from appendages and
specialized for dealing with various types of
food. - Open circulatory system with a dorsal contractile
heart arteries and hemocoel.
7Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Respiration occurs in multiple possible ways
- across the body surface
- via a system of tracheal tubes
- gills
- book lungs
8Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Nervous system is similar to that of annelids. A
dorsal brain connected via a ring around the
pharynx to a double ventral nerve cord.
9Characteristics of the Arthropoda
- Sexes are usually separate with internal
fertilization. - Can be oviparous or ovoviviparous.
- Offspring often go through process of
metamorphosis. - Parthenogenesis occurs in a some species (e.g.
aphids).
10Classification of Phylum Arthropoda
- Subphylum Chelicarata horseshoe crabs, spiders,
tick, mites, scorpions, - Subphylum Crustacea crabs, lobsters, copepods,
barnacles, pill bugs - Subphylum Myriapoda millipedes and centipedes
- Subphylum Hexapoda springtails, insects
11Classification of the Arthropoda
- Subphylum Chelicerata
- Class Merostomata
- Subclass Xiphosurida Horseshoe crabs
- Class Pycnogonida sea spiders
- Class Arachnida spiders, scorpions, ticks,
mites, harvestmen, whip scorpions.
12Subphylum Chelicerata
- Body is divided into two tagmata (fused segments)
head and abdomen. - Six pairs of appendages
- a pair of chelicerae, first pair of appenadges
used for feeding. - a pair of pedipalps (not in horseshoe crabs)
- 4 pairs of walking legs (5 in horseshoe crabs).
- No mandibles or antennae.
13Subphylum Chelicerata
- The chelicrates are a very ancient group that
includes the extinct Eurypterids (giant water
scorpions (200-500 mya), which were the largest
known arthropods reaching up to 3m long.
14Eurypterus (left) from the Silurian of New York
State. Eurypterus remipes was voted the New
York state fossil in 1983. Mixopterus (right)
from the Devonian reached about one meter in
length
15Subphylum Chelicerata
- Subclass Xiphosurida Horseshoe crabs. These are
an ancient group that date from the Cambrian
(543-495 mya). - Five living species. Limulus, which lives in
shallow waters on the Atlantic coast of the U.S.
is almost unchanged since the Triassic (251-206
mya).
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17Subphylum Chelicerata Horseshoe crabs
- Horseshoe crabs have an unsegmented carapace,
which is sort of horseshoe shaped, hence the
name. - There is also a wide abdomen with a long
spinelike tailpiece (telson). - Flat leaf-like gills, called book gills, are
present on the underside.
18Horseshoe crabs
- Horseshoe crabs feed on foods such as worms and
molluscs, such as clams, which brings them into
conflict with fishermen. - The synchonized breeding of horseshoe crabs which
come to spawn on the beaches of the mid-Atlantic
coast of the U.S. at the lunar high tides is a
striking sight in summer. - The eggs produced in the millions are an
important food source for migrating shorebirds
such as Knot, which flock to areas such as the
Delaware Bay to fatten up for migration.
19Horseshoe crabs
- Horseshoe crabs are harvested commercially for
bait and also for their blood, which is used in
laboratory testing for endotoxins in medical
products. - Currently, the horseshoe crab is at the center of
a series of legal battles about the size of
harvests and their sustainability.
20Subphylum Chelicerata Class Pycnogonida sea
spiders
- Another name used for these animals is Pantopoda
(all legs), which is an excellent description.
- The body is greatly reduced in size, whereas the
legs are long and clawed. In some species
modified legs called ovigers are used by males to
carry egg masses. - There is a long proboscis on the head, which the
pycnogonid uses to feed on soft-bodied
invertebrates, especially cnidarians.
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22Class Pycnogonida sea spiders
- Most pycnogonids are small being only a few
millimeters long, but a few reach 70cm measured
by leg spread. - Pycngonids are exclusively marine (occuring from
the intertidal to the deep seas) and there are
about 1000 species.
23Subphylum Chelicerata Class Arachnida Order
Aranae spiders
- Spiders are a very large group with more than
35,000 described species that occur worldwide
except in Antarctica. - The body is divided into a cephalothorax and an
abdomen. - Spiders breathe using book lungs or tracheae.
Book lungs are unique to spiders and consist of a
large number of air pockets extending into a
blood-filled chamber. Tracheae are tubules that
carry air directly from outside to tissues. They
can be closed to prevent excessive water loss.
24Spiders
- Spiders and insects have an excretory system that
uses structures called Malphigian tubules. - Potassium, other salts, and other waste solutes
drain into these tubules, which empty into the
intestine. Rectal glands selectively reabsorb
most of the potassium and water leaving behind
nitrogenous wastes in the form of uric acid,
which requires little water for its excretion.
25Spiders
- Spiders possess eight eyes, but their image
forming ability is limited. - Hairlike setae, however, provide a lot of
information about the environment sensing e.g.
vibrations and air currents
26Spiders
- All spiders are predators and their chelicerae
function as fangs. - The fangs are connected via ducts to venom glands
that produce a lethal venom the spider uses to
dispatch its prey. - After killing a prey item the spider injects
digestive fluid into the organism and sucks up
the resulting soup.
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28Spiders
- Spiders use a variety of techniques to catch
prey. - Some chase their prey or leap on it, some ambush
prey often using trip wires, and, of course, many
use webs. - One small group, the bolas spiders, capture their
prey by deception.
29Bolas spiders
- Bolas spiders at night spin a line of thread with
a sticky globule (the bolas akin to the bolas
used by South American Gauchos to hunt) at the
free end. - The bolas contains pheromones which attract
certain male moths which think they are
approaching a female. When the spider senses the
vibrations in the air caused by a nearby flying
moth it twirls its bolas in response. - Once the bolas strikes the moth it sticks and the
moth is hauled in.
30Silk-spinning
- Spiders spin silk, which they use to make webs to
trap prey. - Webs come in a variety of shapes and sizes and
contain and are coated with an adhesive that
holds prey. - Webs are typically placed in insect flyways and
the spider sits and waits for an insect to become
entangled. The vibrations of the struggling prey
signal the spider to emerge and dispatch it.
31Silk-spinning
- The silk is produced by two or three spinnerets,
which are connected to abdominal silk glands. The
silk is formed from a protein secretion that
hardens on contact with air. - The silk is extremely strong (stronger e.g. than
steel of equivalent weight) and is being used as
a kevlar substitute. Unlike steel, silk can
stretch which makes it an extremely useful
material.
32Silk-spinning
- The silk is used to make webs, but also for a
variety of other purposes - Line nests
- Form egg sacs
- For dispersal by ballooning
- To wrap prey
33Reproduction in spiders
- Courtship rituals are a major feature of spider
mating in which the (usually much smaller) male
attempts to mate without being eaten by the
female. - Males produce a sperm packet wrapped in silk
which he holds in a cavity in one of his
pedipalps (second pair of appendages).
34Reproduction in spiders
- The male, if he lives long enough, inserts a
pedipalp into a females genital opening and she
stores the sperm in a seminal vesicle. - The female later fertilizing eggs when she is
ready to lay them. Eggs are laid in a silk
cocoon where the young hatch and remain for a
short time and molt before departing for an
independent life.
35Toxic spiders
- The vast majority of spiders are harmless to
humans, but a handful are toxic and potentially
deadly. - In the U.S. there are a few venomous spiders
several black widow species (genus Latrodectus),
the brown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa) and the
hobo spider (Tegenaria agrestis) introduced from
Europe to the Pacific Northwest.
36Toxic spiders
- Spiders eat a liquid diet by injecting digestive
juices into their prey and some spider venoms
contribute to this process by destroying tissue.
- Bites of such spiders can lead to tissue
necrosis. This is the type of venom possessed by
the hobo and brown recluse spiders.
37Hobo spider
Brown recluse spider
38Toxic spiders
- A bite from one of these spiders results in a
bite site that develops a painful ulcer where
tissue dies (necrosis) and in the case of hobo
spiders severe headaches. - One component of brown recluse venom is
sphingomyelinase D which attacks and dissolves
cell membranes.
39Toxic spiders
- Sphingomyelinase D and other components in the
venom apparently also turn on the patients
inflammatory defenses against his or her own
tissues. - White blood cells destroy themselves releasing
other enzymes that attack the victims own flesh
and blood clots form in tiny vessels cutting off
the blood supply to the bite area and causing
necrosis.
40Toxic spiders
- Generally, bites are not fatal but if the venom
gets into the bloodstream it may destroy red
blood cells or attack the bone marrow, which may
lead to fatal complications.
41Toxic spiders
- Black widow spiders and the funnel web spider
(one of the worlds most dangerous species
naturally its from Australia!) produce potent
neurotoxins that affect the nervous system.
42Female Black Widow spider with egg sac
43Toxic spiders
- Venom is complex and many components only affect
invertebrates, but one substance in black widow
venom called alpha latrotoxin stimulates cells to
release neurotransmitters such as acetylcholine.
- Nerves contract uncontrollably and this can cause
small muscle rigidity and intense, agonizing
pain.
44Toxic spiders
- Additional symptoms include nausea and vomiting,
increased blood pressure, and the heart may begin
racing or slowing significantly. - Brain functions may also be affected producing
anxiety, amnesia, and even psychosis.
45Toxic spiders
- Black widow bites were historically often
associated with outhouses, but now usually occur
when working in the fields or clearing junk in
outbuildings. - Fatality rates have been estimated at 1-5, but
this figure certainly is an overestimate as many
people bitten do not seek medical attention.
Those most at risk are small children and the
elderly.
46Toxic spiders
- Funnel web spiders (especially the Sydney funnel
web spider) are extremely dangerous. - Funnel web spiders inject a venom whose lethal
component is called atrotoxin. - The toxin travels in the lymphatic system and
binds to nerve endings all over the body where it
causes nerves to discharge wildly, especially
those of the autonomic nervous system.
47Funnel web spiders
Funnel web spider burrow site
48Toxic spiders
- The constant discharging of the autonomic nervous
system results in fever, irregular heart rhythm
and wild changes in heart rate and blood pressure
that can cause respiratory failure, coma and
cardiac arrest. - Death may occur anything from 15 minutes to 6
days after a bite.
49Toxic spiders
- Work by Dr. Struan Sutherland and colleagues in
Melbourne has led to success in treating funnel
web spider bites and greatly reduced mortality. - Dr Sutherland pioneered the use of pressure
bandages to prevent the spreading of the venom
and led the team that developed successful
antivenins.