Title: Trilobites, Chelicerates, and Myriapods
1Trilobites, Chelicerates, and Myriapods
2Phylum Arthropoda
- Two out of every three known species of animals
are arthropods. - Members of the phylum Arthropoda are found in
nearly all habitats of the biosphere.
3Phylum Arthropoda
- Arthropods are
- Multicellular
- Bilaterally symmetrical
- Triploblastic
- Have a true coelom (protostomes)
- Segmented
4General Characteristics of Arthropods
- The diversity and success of arthropods are
largely related to their segmentation, hard
exoskeleton (made of chitin), and jointed
appendages.
5General Characteristics of Arthropods
- Segments have combined into functional groups
called tagmata. - Tagmata have specialized purposes.
6General Characteristics of Arthropods
- As arthropods evolved, the segments fused, and
the appendages became more specialized. - The appendages of some living arthropods are
modified for many different functions.
7General Characteristics of Arthropods
- Arthropods have an open circulatory system in
which fluid called hemolymph is circulated into
the spaces surrounding the tissues and organs. - A variety of organs specialized for gas exchange
have evolved in arthropods.
8A Versatile Exoskeleton
- The exoskeleton of arthropods is very protective,
but still flexible. - The exoskeleton is made of chitin.
- Prevents desiccation.
- Provides places for muscle attachment.
- Does not allow for growth, the outer covering
must be molted ecdysis.
9More Efficient Locomotion
- Usually, each segment bears a pair of jointed
appendages. - The appendages have sensory hairs and may be
modified for sensory functions, food handling, or
walking swimming.
10Air Piped Directly to Cells
- Most terrestrial arthropods have an efficient
tracheal system of air tubes, which delivers
oxygen directly to the tissues and cells. - Limits body size.
- Aquatic arthropods breathe using internal or
external gills.
11Highly Developed Sensory Organs
- Arthropods have a variety of sensory organs.
12Complex Behavior Patterns
- Arthropods show complex behavior patterns.
- Mostly innate behaviors.
- Some learned.
13Metamorphosis
- Intraspecific competition (between members of one
species) is reduced because of metamorphosis. - Larval forms may be quite different from adults.
14Relationships Among Arthropod Subgroups
- Clade Panarthropoda, Phylum Arthropoda
- Divided into subphyla based on relationships
between subgroups based on molecular data.
15Relationships Among Arthropod Subgroups
- Centipedes, millipedes, pauropods, and symphylans
are placed in subphylum Myriapoda. - Insects are placed in subphylum Hexapoda.
- Spiders, ticks, horseshoe crabs and their
relatives form subphylum Chelicerata. - Lobsters, crabs, barnacles, and others form
subphylum Crustacea.
16Relationships Among Arthropod Subgroups
- Formerly, insects and myriapods were placed
together in uniramia. - Uniramous appendages.
- The mandibulate hypothesis suggests all
arthropods with mandibles are more closely
related to each other than to arthropods with
chelicerae.
- Mandibles in each group may or may not be
homologous. - mtDNA data support this hypothesis.
17Subphylum Trilobita
- Early arthropods, such as trilobites showed
little variation from segment to segment.
18Subphylum Trilobita
- Trilobites arose during the Cambrian maybe
earlier and lasted for 300 million years.
19Subphylum Trilobita
- Trilobites had a trilobed shape.
- Three tagmata
- Head (cephalon) with a mouth, compound eyes,
antennae, and 4 pairs of leglike appendages. - Trunk with a variable number of segments each
with a pair of biramous appendages. - One of the branches of biramous appendage was
fringed and may have been a gill. - Pygidium segments fused into a plate.
20Subphylum Trilobita
- Most could roll up like pill bugs.
- Probably benthic scavengers.
- Many (especially later species) had large,
complex, many-faceted eyes.
21Subphylum Chelicerata
- Chelicerate arthropods include eurypterids,
horseshoe crabs, spiders, ticks, mites,
scorpions, sea spiders.
22Subphylum Chelicerata
- They have 6 pairs of cephalothoracic appendages
- Chelicerae (mouthparts)
- Pedipalps
- 4 pairs of walking legs
- Lack mandibles and antennae.
23Class Merostomata
- Class Merostomata includes the eurypterids and
horseshoe crabs. - Eurypterids were giant water scorpions up to 3 m
in length. - Cambrian through Permian.
- Predators, some with large crushing claws.
24Class Merostomata
- Three genera of horseshoe crabs live today.
- Limulus, found in North America, has existed on
earth almost unchanged since the Triassic period.
25Class Merostomata
- Horseshoe crabs have an unsegmented carapace
(hard dorsal shield), a broad abdomen, and a long
telson (tail piece). - Cephalothorax
- Chelicerae
- Pedipalps
- 4 pairs walking legs
- Abdomen
- 6 pairs of thin appendages
- Book gills found on 5.
26Class Merostomata
- Horseshoe crabs have simple and compound eyes.
- Feed at night on worms and small molluscs.
- Come to shore in large numbers to mate at high
tide. - Trilobite larvae resemble trilobites.
27Class Pycnogonida
- Sea spiders, class Pycnogonida, have small, thin
bodies and usually 4 pairs of walking legs. - Found in all oceans, most common in polar seas.
- Some have chelicerae and pedipalps.
28Class Arachnida
- Class Arachnida includes spiders, scorpions,
mites, and ticks.
50 µm
29Class Arachnida
- Two tagmata
- Cephalothorax
- Chelicerae
- Pedipalps
- 4 pairs walking legs
- Abdomen
30Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- Most spiders order Araneae have 8 simple eyes
that can detect light and motion. - Some hunting jumping spiders may form images.
- Sensory setae detect air currents, web
vibrations, and other stimuli. - Spiders vision usually poor, so awareness of
environment depends largely on cuticular
mechanoreceptors such as sensory setae.
31Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- All are predaceous, mostly on insects.
- Many spin a web used for prey capture.
- Some chase catch prey.
- Injected venom liquefies and digests the tissues
which is sucked into spiders stomach.
32Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- Two or three pairs of spinnerets contain
microscopic tubes that run to silk glands. - Liquid scleroprotein secretion hardens as it is
extruded from spinnerets. - Silk threads are very strong and will stretch
considerably before breaking. - Silk is used for orb webs, lining burrows,
forming egg sacs, and wrapping prey.
33Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- Breathe by book lungs and/or tracheae.
- Book lungs unique to spiders - parallel air
pockets extend into blood-filled chamber. - Air enters chamber through a slit in body wall.
- Tracheae system is less extensive than in
insects. - Transports air directly to tissues.
- Tracheal systems of arthropods represent a case
of evolutionary convergence.
34Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- In spiders and insects, Malpighian tubules serve
as excretory structures. - Potassium, other solutes, and waste are secreted
into tubules. - Rectal glands reabsorb the potassium and water,
leaving wastes and uric acid for excretion. - Conserves water and allows the organisms to live
in dry environments. - Many spiders have coxal glands, modified
nephridia, at the base of legs.
35Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- Reproduction - before mating, male stores sperm
in pedipalps. - A courtship ritual is often required before the
female will allow mating. - Eggs may develop in a cocoon in the web or may be
carried by female. - Young hatch in about two weeks and may molt
before leaving the egg cocoon.
36Class Arachnida - Order Araneae
- Are spiders really dangerous?
- Spiders are allies of humans in our battle with
insects. - American tarantulas rarely bite, and bite is not
dangerous. - Species of black widow spiders are dangerous.
- Venom is neurotoxic.
- Brown recluse spider has hemolytic venom that
destroys tissue around the bite. - Some Australian and South American spiders are
the most dangerous and aggressive.
37Class Arachnida - Order Scorpiones
- Scorpions order Scorpiones feed on insects
spiders which they seize with their pedipalps. - The last segment contains a bulbous base and a
curved barb that injects venom. - Scorpions are viviparous or ovoviviparous
females brood young within their reproductive
tract.
38Class Arachnida - Order Opiliones
- Harvestmen order Opiliones differ from
spiders in that the abdomen and cephalothorax are
broadly joined rather than constricted. - Only two eyes
- Abdomen shows segmentation
- Long legs end in tiny claws.
39Class Arachnida - Order Acari
- Mites and ticks order Acari have a fused
cephalothorax abdomen. - Mites are tiny 1mm or less.
- Some feed on plant juices and can be major pests.
- Several species of ticks carry diseases such as
Lyme disease.
40Class Arachnida - Order Acari
- House dust mites - free-living and often cause
allergies. - Spider mites - one of many important agricultural
pest mites that suck out plant nutrients.
41Class Arachnida - Order Acari
- Hair follicle mite Demodex - harmless but other
species cause mange in domestic animals. - Human itch mite causes intense itching.
42Class Arachnida - Order Acari
- Tick species of Ixodes carry Lyme disease.
- Tick species of Dermacentor transmit Rocky
Mountain spotted fever. - Cattle tick transmits Texas cattle fever.
43Subphylum Myriapoda
- Subphylum Myriapoda includes these classes
- Chilopoda (centipedes)
- Diplopoda (millipedes)
- Pauropoda (pauropods)
- Symphyla (symphylans)
- Use trachea to transport air.
- Excretion usually by Malpighian tubules.
44Class Chilopoda
- Centipedes class Chilopoda contain a few or
many segments each (except the first behind the
head and the last two) with a pair of jointed
legs. - Last pair of legs has a sensory function.
45Class Chilopoda
- Head appendages
- One pair antennae
- One pair mandibles
- One or two pairs of maxillae.
- Dorsoventrally flattened.
46Class Chilopoda
- Sexes are separate.
- Some lay eggs (oviparous).
- Some have live young (viviparous).
- Young like little adults no metamorphosis.
47Class Chilopoda
- Centipedes live in moist environments.
- They are carnivores, feeding on insects worms.
- Prey is killed with poison claws on the first
segment.
48Class Diplopoda
- Millipedes (Class Diplopoda) have two pairs of
legs on each segment. - Head has one pair each of antennae, mandibles,
maxillae. - Body is more cylindrical.
49Class Diplopoda
- Millipedes live in dark, moist places under
rocks or logs. - Most are herbivores, feeding on decayed plant
matter or occasionally living plants. - Slow moving, coil up when disturbed.
- Toxic or repellent fluids secreted when disturbed.
50Class Diplopoda
- After copulation, female lays eggs in a nest and
guards them. - Larvae have only one pair of legs per segment.
51Class Pauropoda
- Live in moist soil, leaf litter, decaying
vegetation, or under bark and debris. - Least well known of myriapods.
- Soft-bodied, small (2 mm or less).
- Approximately 500 species.
- Head lacks true eyes, has branched antennae, and
a pair of sense organs.
52Class Pauropoda
- 12 trunks segments bear 9 pairs of legs but none
on the first or last 2 segments. - One tergal plate covers two segments.
- Lack tracheae, spiracles, and circulatory system.
- Probably most closely related to diplopods.
53Class Symphyla
- Live in humus, leaf mold, and debris.
- Male Scutigerella places a spermatophore at end
of a stalk. - Female stores the sperm in special pouches.
- Removes and smears eggs with sperm before
attaching them to moss or lichen. - Young hatch with only 6 or 7 pairs of legs.
54Class Symphyla
- Small (210 mm) with centipede-like bodies.
- Soft-bodied with 14 segments - 12 segments bear
legs and one bears a pair of spinnerets. - Antennae are long and unbranched.
- About 160 species are known.
- Eyeless with sensory pits at base of antennae.
55Phylogeny
- Relationships between subphyla are debated.
- Taxon of Pancrustacea, which includes hexapods
and crustaceans, is well-supported. - Phylogenies using molecular data rarely support
grouping Myriapoda with Pancrustacea. - There is support for placement of Myriapoda as
the sister taxon for Cheliceratae.
56Phylogeny
- Biologists assume that the ancestral arthropod
had a segmented body with one pair of legs per
segment. - Evolution caused adjacent segments to fuse and to
make body regions. - Hox gene studies indicate that the first five
segments fused to form the head tagma in all four
extant subphyla. - In spiders, Hox gene studies indicate that the
entire prosoma corresponds to the head of other
arthropods.
57Phylogeny
- Genetic studies have been helpful in
understanding the evolution of uniramous and
biramous appendages. - Molecular evidence repeatedly places hexapods
with crustaceans even though hexapods have
uniramous appendages and crustaceans have
biramous appendages. - Leads to the question Did uniramous appendage
development evolve more than once?
58Adaptive Diversification
- In contrast to annelids, arthropods have
pronounced tagmatization by fusion of somites. - Those with primitive characters have appendages
on each somite. - Derived forms are specialized.
- Modification of exoskeleton and appendages
allowed variation in feeding and movement. - Adaptations made possible by cuticular
exoskeleton and small size fostered high
diversity.
59Phylogeny
- Subphylum Trilobita
- Subphylum Chelicerata
- Class Merostomata
- Class Pycnogonida
- Class Arachnida
- Subphylum Myriapoda
- Class Diplopoda
- Class Chilopoda
- Class Pauropoda
- Class Symphyla
- Subphylum Crustacea
- Subphylum Hexapoda