Title: Chapter 10 Animals with Armor
1Chapter 10 Animals with Armor
- When you have finished this
- Chapter, you should be able to
- List the basic characteristics of the
crustaceans. - Describe the structures and functions of lobsters
and crabs. - Identify important features of the smaller
crustaceans and other marine arthropods.
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3Lesson 26 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Phylum Arthropoda
- Members of the phylum Arthropoda are commonly
called the arthropods (meaning jointed
appendages). - Animals including the lobsters, crabs, shrimp,
and barnacles have moveable arms and legs,
referred to as jointed appendages. - Arthropods also possess an external skeleton or
exoskeleton composed of a tough fibrous material
called chitin. - The exoskeleton functions not only as a
protective cover for arthropods but also as a
place of attachment for their muscles. - Classes of Arthropods
- Arthropods that have a separate head (cephalo),
chest (thorax), and abdomen and have 5 pairs of
legs are classified in class Crustacea. - Arthropods that have 6 pairs of legs are found in
the class Merostomata.
4Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Class Crustacea
- Body Structure
- Crustaceans have three main body regions the head
(cephalo), chest (thorax), and abdomen and have 5
pairs of legs. - Crustaceans are also called decapods (meaning 10
legs). - The first pairs of legs are the claws (chelipeds)
used for seizing food and the other four pairs
are the walking legs. - The exoskeleton that covers the head and chest is
the carapace. - The head contains the eyes, antennae, and mouth
parts used for feeding. - The thorax contains the appendages used for food
getting and walking legs. - Crustacea also swim, using their paddle-like
swimmerets located in the abdomen.
5Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - External Anatomy of the Lobster
6Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Molting
- Crabs, lobsters, and shrimp shed their outer skin
one or more times each year, a process called
molting. Crustaceans can regenerate body parts. - If an appendage is lost in a fight, another
will grow back.
7Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Life Functions of Crustaceans
- Crustaceans are largely scavengers.
- Food is digested in a one way digestive tract.
- The rapid beating of the mouth parts sends
currents of water over the gills located under
the carapace. - Oxygen and other nutrients are transported around
the body in the blood. The blood is blue, due to
the presence of a copper based pigment,
hemocyanin. - Transport occurs in an open circulatory system.
- The nervous system has a ventral nerve cord and
brain.
8Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Life Activities of Lobsters
- Two common species of lobsters in our waters are
the northern lobster and the spiny lobster.
Lobsters are aggressive and often fight among
themselves. - Lobsters are predators, able to feed on other
invertebrates such as mussels and sea urchins,
which they grab with their claws. They also
scavenge on the remains of dead animals. - Food is digested in a one-way digestive tract
consisting of a mouth, esophagus, stomach, and
intestines. Wastes are eliminated through the
anus. - Lobsters use gills for breathing.
- Oxygen and nutrients are transported around the
lobsters body in its blood. Blood is pumped by
a one-chambered heart. Lobsters and all
arthropods have an open circulatory system. - The lobsters nervous system enables it to carry
out a variety of responses. Its eyes are mounted
on moveable stalks. Two pairs of antennae
actively feel out the environment. A ventral
nerve cord carries messages to and from the
brain. - Lobsters reproduce sexually. Fertilization is
internal, and development is external.
9Lesson 27 Introduction to CrustaceansSection
10.1 The Lobster
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_____________________________________________ - Northern American Lobster and the Spiny Lobster
10Lesson 28 Describe the structures and
functions of the crab.Section 10.2 The Crab
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_______________ - Types of Crabs
- There are many species of crabs alive in the
world today. - The great diversity that exists is due to the
fact that they have successfully adapted to many
different habitats. - Examples include, the mole crab, spider crab,
fiddler crab, and the blue crab.
11Lesson 28 Describe the structures and
functions of the crab.Section 10.2 The Crab
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______________ - Structures of the Crab
- The crabs body is divided into segments (the
cephalothorax and the abdomen), which are covered
by the carapace. - Their head region has two eyes (on stalks) and
antennae for perceiving touch and temperature
stimuli. Their well-developed nervous system
enables them to respond to stimuli and control
muscular activities such as locomotion, via the
ventral nerve cord. - Like the lobster, crabs breathe by means of their
gills and they transport oxygen and nutrients in
an open circulatory system.
12Lesson 28 Describe the structures and functions
of the crab.Section 10.2 The Crab
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______________ - Structures of the Crab
- The abdomen is small and flat and is folded
between the crabs walking legs on its ventral
side. You can tell the sex of the crab by the
shape of its abdomen. - The female has a U-shaped abdomen and the male
has V-shaped abdomen.
13Lesson 28 Describe the structures and
functions of the crab.Section 10.2 The Crab
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_______________ - Reproduction in Crabs
- Crabs produce large numbers of offspring. The
female carries a mass of eggs between her abdomen
and thorax. Fertilization is internal and
development is external. It is most adaptive for
the crab to produce an abundance of fertilized
eggs, since so many are eaten during their larval
phase in the plankton population.
14Lesson 28 Describe the structures and
functions of the crab.Section 10.2 The Crab
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______________ - Feeding in the Crab
- Crabs eat mainly dead plant and animal matter,
although some graze on algae and others are
predatory. - They use their two sharp claws to tear and shred
food. - The food is passed to the mouth, where it is cut
into small pieces by the mouthparts. Food is
digested in a one-way digestive system.
15Lesson 29Aim How does the horseshoe crab
carry out its life functions?
- Characteristics of Horseshoe Crabs
- horseshoe crabs lack antennae and mouthparts.
- have six pair of appendages the first pair is a
pair of pinching claws (the cheliceras), and the
other five are the walking legs. - covered by a domed carapace, which is followed by
a long spiked tail (telson). - classified in the class Merostomata.
- inhabits the waters along Americas Atlantic and
Gulf coasts and along the Asian Pacific coast. - has four eyes two simple eyes and two compound
eyes located on the top of its carapace. - behind the legs are book gills, which are used
for breathing and locomotion. - the horseshoe crab has copper-based hemocyanin in
its blood for transporting oxygen
16Lesson 29Aim How does the horseshoe crab
carry out its life functions?
- Life Cycle of the Horseshoe Crab
- In late spring, when the tide is high, hordes of
horseshoe crabs invade the sandy beaches and
marshes. -
- The females, carrying the smaller males clutched
to their backs, congregate at the high-tide mark
where they dig holes in the sand and lay hundreds
on tiny pale green eggs. - The males, still attached to the females,
externally fertilize the eggs, which are then
covered by sand. - About two weeks later, the eggs hatch into ting
swimming juvenile horseshoe crabs that are
carried out to sea by the tide. - As the horseshoe crab grows, its outer skin
hardens to form a carapace. The horseshoe crab
reaches maturity in about 8 years. - During this period the horseshoe crab undergoes
many molts, casting off its outer shell each time
it grows. - Horseshoe crabs can live as long as 20 years.
Fossils of the horseshoe crab show that this
animal has not changed very much throughout its
more than 400 million year history. The
horseshoe crab is often described as a living
fossil.
17Lesson 29Aim How does the horseshoe crab
carry out its life functions?
18Lesson 30Aim Diversity Among Crustaceans
- CH 10 SECTION 10-3 DIVERSITY AMONG CRUSTACEANS
- Crustaceans range in size from nearly microscopic
to absolutely huge. You are aware of the much
larger ones , such as the lobster, crab, and
shrimp, because they are popular seafoods. - The shrimp looks somewhat like a small version
of the lobster.
19Lesson 30Aim Diversity Among Crustaceans
- Floating and drifting on the ocean surface are
the tiny copepods, which inhabit temperate waters
and the larger krill, which are found in the
Antarctic. Both form the basis of the marine
food chains. -
- COPEPODS KRILL
20Lesson 30Aim Diversity Among Crustaceans
- (4) Living under rocks and other debris in the
intertidal zone from the Artic to the Chesapeake
Bay is the scud. On sandy beaches from Canada to
Florida living in the moist seaweeds in the
strand line is the beach flea. Crustaceans, like
the krill, scud, and beach flea, whose bodies are
compressed laterally are called amphipods.
21Lesson 30Aim Diversity Among Crustaceans
- (5) Crustaceans, like the sea roach, whose bodies
are flattened from top to bottom are called
isopods. Isopods inhabit shallow coastal waters,
some are parasitic.
22Lesson 30Aim Diversity Among Crustaceans
- (6) The barnacle lives attached to rocks and
other hard surfaces (encrusting organisms). The
barnacle feeds by filtering tiny plankton from
the water using its feathery appendages called
cirri. There are two types of barnacles the
acorn barnacle and the gooseneck barnacle. The
gooseneck barnacle are attached to long stalks
which attach to a hard substrate. - GOOSENECK BARNACLE ACORN BARNACLE