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Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” es used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/arthropoda/arthropoda.html olution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/_0_0/arthropods_intro_01
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Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Chapter 36 Arthropods& Chapter 37 Insects

“The real rulers of the Earth”Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/arthropoda/arthropoda.htmlhttp://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/_0_0/arthropods_intro_01

Page 2: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Just how dominant are arthropods?

• More than 83% of all described animal species are arthropods.

• That's about 160 million insects for each person on Earth.

• Have evolved to fill a variety of ecological niches — from tiny internal parasite to giant bird-eating predator.

Page 3: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

• Arthropods are a lot more than just delicious feasts and disgusting pests.

• What are the characteristics of an arthropod ?

                                                                                                                                                                 

Page 4: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

5 Characteristics of all Arthropods

Page 5: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Bilateral symmetry

• High degree of Cephalization

• Variety of segmented appendages around the mouth

• Segmented antennae- sense environment

• Compound eyes- made of many individual light detectors, each with their own lens.

Page 6: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Segmented Body

• Each body segment tends to repeat the same suite of structures (ie, a pair of legs, a set of breathing

organs, & a set of nerves),

• sets of segments are grouped into a larger unit, such as the abdomen & cephalothorax.

Page 7: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Hard Exoskeleton

• Made of protein & Chitin (a polysaccharide)• Must molt many times as grows• Enzymes digest the layer of exoskeleton

inside soften & then shed. It takes a few days for the newly excreted exoskeleton to harden.

Page 8: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Jointed Legs

• How can an animal with a rigid body covering move its legs? a problem for arthropods: flexibility.

• All arthropods (arthro = joint, pod = foot) have jointed limbs.

• In most of the leg, the exoskeleton is hard, but at the joints it is softer and bendable, allowing movement in the same way that a suit of armor does.

• The limb can be controlled by contracting muscles connected to the exoskeleton on both sides of the joint.

Page 9: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Many pairs of limbs• ancestral arthropod had

many body segments with one pair of limbs on each segment.

• in modern arthropods,– some limbs have even been

lost completely as they evolved to be smaller and smaller, while others have evolved into new shapes. functions.

• Tagma-specialized segements

Page 10: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Systems in Arthropods• All- Open circulatory system• Respiration-

– gills (aquatic crustaceans) – tracheae – book lungs (spiders)

• Excretion- – Green glands (Crusteaceans) – Malpighian tubules(spiders)

• Many arthropods have wings.• The two major types of mouthparts are:

– mandibles, which are jawlike– chelicerae (singular, chelicera), which are pincerlike

Page 11: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

The five major subphyla of the phylum Arthropoda.

Page 12: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Arthropods usually divided into 5 subphyla based on:– differences in

development – in the structure

of appendages, such as mouthparts.

Page 13: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Trilobites

• Extinct• Many body appendages with one pair of

appendages per segment• Trilobites, living in shallow seas, flourished as

swimmers, crawlers and burrowers for some 350 million years. They evolved rapidly into many beautiful, bizarre and, even by today's standards, futuristic forms.

• Fossil evidence of these extraordinary marine creatures are found on all continents, entrapped in the hardened sediments of Ancient Seas.

http://www.trilobite.com/

Page 14: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Subphylum Myriapoda

• Means”many feet”

• One pair of branched antennae

• Many body segments

• Includes class: – Diplopoda (millipedes)

• Up to 100 body segments• 2 pairs of legs on each segment

– Chilopoda (centipedes)• In tropical regions can reach 12 inches long• From 15 to 175 pairs of legs

Page 15: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Subphylum Crustacea• contains about 38,000 known species.

• Terrestrial & Marine• so diverse their single defining characteristic is having two pairs

of antennae. • Most also have:

– a pair of mandibles– a pair of appendages on each body segment– some branched appendages– 16 to 20 segments & – several tagmata

• Many have a free-swimming

larval stage called a nauplius.

http://copepodes.obs-banyuls.fr/images/NAUPLIUS.jpg

Page 18: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

More aquatic crustaceans

• Order Decapoda -means“10 feet”

• Decapods have five pairs of legs

• Crayfish, lobsters, crabs, and shrimp are decapods

• Respiration through gills• (see more about crayfish in detail at end of

chapter- know parts for dissection lab)

Page 19: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

4. Subphylum Chelicerata• Defined by presence of chelicerae

– The first pair of appendages– Modified into pincer or fangs

• Class Arachnid- spiders, scorpions, mites, ticks

• Some important Parts : – Chelicerae ( in spiders = fangs to inject poison)

– Pedipalps (hold food)

– 8 simple eyes at anterior of cephalothorax (NOT compound eyes!)

– Spinnerets- 3 pairs on tip of abdomen, for making silk

– Book lungs- like folds in a book= lots of surface area for gas exchange (some spiders use Tracheae for respiration instead)

– Malpighian Tubes- excretory tubes collect wastes, liquids. The liquid is reabsorbed (to conserve water) & waste is nearly solid.

Page 20: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Spiders-A full facial view of any spider shows its killing ability.

• Two powerful chelicerae, protrude down • Each chelicera bears a hinged fang. • Both fangs have ducts that lead up to the venom

glands within the head.

• Spiders fall into two groups, each being classified upon how they strike their prey. – The fangs of Tarantulas are so hinged that they articulate in

a front-to-back motion allowing them to strike their prey from above.

– Most other spiders have fangs that are hinged laterally, providing a left-to-right strike.

www.microscopix.co.uk/spiders/fangs/index.htm

Page 21: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Spider Chelicerae

Fangs, Chelicerae of Zebra Jumping SpiderSalticus scenicus

www.microscopix.co.uk/spiders/fangs/index.htm

Fangs and Chelicerae of Tarantula SpiderlingBrachypelma smithi(Mexican Red-Knee Tarantula)

Page 22: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Anatomy of a spider

** Mites and ticks differ from spiders because they

have a fused cephalothorax and abdomen.

Page 23: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Life of a Spider

• Spiders feed on insects and other small animals. Many species are adapted to capture certain prey.

• Spiders rarely harm humans, but two species in the United States are dangerous:– the black widow– the brown recluse

• A male spider is usually smaller than the female. • Females lay eggs in a silken case.

Page 24: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

5. Subphylum Hexapoda

• Class Insecta• By many standards- the most successful group of

animals on earth.

• Entomology- the study of insects & terrestrial arthropods.

• Body of an insect is divided into 3 tagmata: – Head– Thorax– Abdomen

Page 25: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

“bugs”

• Because they dominate all terrestrial environments that support human life, insects are usually our most important competitors for food, fiber, and other natural resources.

Page 26: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

See page 743 for common insect orders

• See Example organism: Grasshopper• Please note parts for dissection lab,

see p 745 text.

Page 27: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

The crayfish- next 4 pages are notes for dissection lab

• an abundant freshwater crustacean that is structurally similar to lobsters, which are marine crustaceans.

• Crayfish, lobsters, crabs, and shrimp are decapods, or members of the order Decapoda. Decapoda means “10 feet.”

• Decapods have five pairs of legs that are used for locomotion.

Page 28: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

External Structure• The crayfish’s body is divided into

– the cephalothorax, which is covered by the carapace and is divided into

• the head, which has five segments• the thorax, which has eight segments

– the abdomen, which is is divided into six segments

• A pair of appendages is attached to each segment of the crayfish. Several pairs have specialized functions.

• These appendages include:– Antennae– Antennules– Mandibles– Maxillae– Maxillipeds– Chelipeds– Walking legs– Swimmerets

Page 29: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Crayfish -Parts for lab

Page 30: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Excretion• Green glands assist in excretion of excess water that enters the body

by osmosis.

Digestion• Digestive gland near the stomach secretes enzymes for digestion.

Respiration • gills.

Circulation• open.

Nervous & Sensory Organs• Many small sensory hairs. (sense water vibrations & chemicals) Compound

eyes are set on two stalks.

Page 31: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Chapter 37 Insects• Entomologists classify insects into more than

25 orders based on characteristics such as:– structure of mouthparts– number of wings– type of development

Factors responsible for their success include:–ability to fly -exoskeleton

–jointed appendages -small size–large numbers offspring -short life span

Page 32: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.
Page 33: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Just how dominant are insects?

Page 34: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Comparison of 2 of the 5 groups of Arthropods

Page 35: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Insects as Food • http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/course/ent425/text01/index.html

• Insects were undoubtedly an important source of nutrition for our early human ancestors.  Even today, they are still collected and eaten by people of many cultures.  In Mexico, dried grasshoppers are sold in village markets.  High in protein and low in fat, they may be fried or ground into meal and mixed with flour to make tortillas.  Sago grubs, the larvae of a wood-boring beetle, are considered a delicacy in Papua New Guinea.  The islanders boil the larvae or roast them over an open fire.  Ants, bees, termites, caterpillars, water bugs, beetle larvae, flies, crickets, katydids, cicadas, and dragonfly nymphs are among a long list of edible insects that provide nutrition for the people of Australia, Africa, South America, the Middle East, and the Far East.  Indeed, Americans and other descendents of western European culture appear to be unique among peoples of the world in having such a strong cultural taboo against the use of insects as food.

• Silkworm pupae forhuman food inThailand

Page 36: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

A Recipe for Maggot Crispies

• 1/4 cup margarine4 cups small marshmallows3 cups crispy cereal3 cups dry roasted maggots or mealwormsIn a saucepan, melt margarine and marshmallows. Remove from heat and stir in cereal and maggots. Spread mixture in a 9x13 greased pan and allow to cool.

Page 37: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Insect body –is divided into three tagmata:

1. Head -has mandibles and one pair of unbranched antennae.

2. Thorax -has three pairs of jointed legs and, in many species, one or two pairs of wings.

3. Abdomen -has 9 to 11 segments but neither wings nor legs in adults.

Page 38: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Insects and People• Insects negatively affect humans by:

– competing for food– transmitting diseases– destroying buildings & other manufactured products

• Insects benefit humans by:– serving as food for other animals– pollinating flowers– making valuable products such as honey– recycling nutrients in ecosystems

Page 39: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

External Anatomy Grasshopper

Page 40: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Internal Anatomy Grasshopper

Page 41: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Grasshopper body- three tagmata:

– The head • mouthparts -labrum & labium are mouthparts that

function like upper and lower lips, respectively.

• a pair of unbranched antennae• pairs of simple and compound eyes.

– The thorax is composed of:

• Prothorax

• Mesothorax

• Metathorax

– The abdomen has upper and lower plates

Page 42: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Insect mouthparts

Page 43: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Circulation, Respiration, & Excretion

• Insects have an open circulatory system that transports nutrients through the body.

• Gas exchange occurs by means of air-filled tracheae that reach deep into the body.

• Malpighian tubules remove cellular wastes from the hemolymph while conserving water.

Page 44: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Nervous system• The grasshopper’s central nervous system consists of

a brain and a ventral nerve cord with ganglia located in each body segment.

• Nerves extend from the brain to sensory structures.• Insect sensory structures include :

– simple and compound eyes– sensory hairs on antennae and other body parts

– in some species, a sound-sensing tympanum

Page 45: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Reproduction

• Grasshoppers have separate sexes, – as do all insects.

• During mating, the male deposits sperm into the female’s seminal receptacle, where the eggs are fertilized internally.

• The last segment of the female’s abdomen forms the ovipositor, which she uses to lay fertilized eggs.

Page 46: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Most insects go through

metamorphosis.

• In incomplete metamorphosis, a nymph hatches from an egg and resembles the adult but has undeveloped reproductive organs and no wings. The nymph molts several times to become an adult.

• In complete metamorphosis, a wormlike larva called a caterpillar hatches from an egg and molts several times before becoming a pupa. The pupa molts to produce the adult, which resembles neither the larva nor the pupa.

Page 47: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

Incomplete vs. Complete metamorphosis

Complete metamorphosis -allows larvae and adults of the same species to avoid competing

for space and food.-allows survival in periods of harsh weather or scant resources.

Page 48: Chapter 36 Arthropods & Chapter 37 Insects “The real rulers of the Earth” Sources used include textbook, (Holt Modern Biology) //.

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