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Phylum Arthropoda “jointed foot” Chitonous exoskeleton Open circulatory system Polyphyletic or monophyletic? Merostomata, Crustacea, Trilobites – biramous Insects, centipedes, millipedes - uniramous
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Phylum Arthropoda

Dec 30, 2015

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mariko-phillips

Phylum Arthropoda. “jointed foot” Chitonous exoskeleton Open circulatory system Polyphyletic or monophyletic? Merostomata, Crustacea, Trilobites – biramous Insects, centipedes, millipedes - uniramous. Segmentation. Characteristic of Arthropoda Both external and internal segmentation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Phylum Arthropoda

Phylum Arthropoda

• “jointed foot”

• Chitonous exoskeleton

• Open circulatory system

• Polyphyletic or monophyletic?–Merostomata, Crustacea, Trilobites –

biramous– Insects, centipedes, millipedes -

uniramous

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Segmentation

• Characteristic of Arthropoda

• Both external and internal segmentation

• Some evidence of segmentation lost

• Regional specialization throughout phylum

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Annelid-Arthropod Link

• Segmentation– Segments lost– Segments have fused– Divergence of appendages

• Nervous System

• Spiral determinate cleavage

• Pair of appendages on each body segment

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Think about ancestral arthropod

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Tagmosis

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Cephalization

See Figure 16-3

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Uniramous

Biramous

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Fig 16-1C

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Fig 16-1E

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Figure 16-1B

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• Coelom and Blood-Vascular System– Coelom reduced extensively (hydrostatic

to rigid skeleton)– Coelom larger in embryonic development– Remnants persist with nephridia and

reproductive organs– Circulatory system for transport– Combination of hemocoel and blood

vessels (not present in all arthropods)

Page 15: Phylum Arthropoda

Saccate Nephridia

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Gas Exchange

• Gills (Crustacea, aquatic insects**)

• Book gills (Merostomata)

• Book lungs (many Arachnida)

• Tracheae (all tracheates [includes insects], Onychophora, Arachnids) - convergence

Page 17: Phylum Arthropoda

Down to cellular level and chitin

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ForegutHindgutMidgut

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Cornea fixedrhodopsinmosaic image

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Other Sensory Structures

• Mechanoreceptors

• Chemoreceptors

• Equilibrium receptors

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Subphylum Trilobitomorpha

• All extinct

• Present 560 through 260 mya

• Marine

• Diverse – occupied many niches

• Most 3 – 10 cm long

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See also Fig 17-2A

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Subphylum Chelicerata

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Subphylum Chelicerata

• Body of two tagmata (regions)– Cephalothorax (prosoma)– abdomen

• Cephalothorax – acron + 7 segments

• Six pair appendages– 1st appendage – chelicerae– 2nd pair – pedipalps (often sensory)– Rest are walking legs

Page 28: Phylum Arthropoda

Subphylum Chelicerata

• Abdomen

• Primitive condition– Preabdomen (7 segments)– Postabdomen (5 segments and telson)– Varying levels of fusion of abdomen–Many terrestrial, some marine and

freshwater

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Crustacea

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Subphylum Crustacea

• Marine, freshwater, with a few terrestrial• Body in 2 - 3 tagmata– Head = acron + five segments (fused)– Typical is five pair of appendages (1st and

2nd antennae, 3 pr mouthparts)– 2nd antennae homologous to chelicerae– Additional fusion of thoracic segments to

head in higher Crustacea

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Subphylum Crustacea

• Thorax variable– Depends on if been additional fusion– Cephalothorax characteristic of major

crustacean groups

• Abdomen also variable in number of segments

• Abdomenal appendages - pleiopods

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Class Hexapoda

• Uniramous appendages (sP Uniramia)• Most successful group of metazoa• Terrestrial, also freshwater and marine• Three tagmata (H, T, A)• Head – 3 to 7 segments, probably 7• Thorax – 3 segments (pro-, meso-, meta-)• Abdomen – 9 to 11 segments, no

appendages

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