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Phylum Arthropoda Insects
25

Phylum Arthropoda

Jan 23, 2016

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Phylum Arthropoda. Insects. Subphylum Hexapoda. Class Parainsecta Class Insecta. Class Parainsecta. Springtail, proturans, and diplurans Wingless, add segments as they grow. Class Insecta. Success. Live almost everywhere except salt water 1 million species Ability to fly - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Phylum Arthropoda

Phylum Arthropoda

Insects

Page 2: Phylum Arthropoda

Subphylum Hexapoda

• Class Parainsecta• Class Insecta

Page 3: Phylum Arthropoda

Class Parainsecta

• Springtail, proturans, and diplurans• Wingless, add segments as they grow

Page 4: Phylum Arthropoda

Class Insecta

Page 5: Phylum Arthropoda

Success• Live almost everywhere except salt water• 1 million species

• Ability to fly• Light skeleton with jointed appendages

• Small size• Very short life spans• Produce large numbers of eggs– Natural selection occurs quickly

Page 6: Phylum Arthropoda

Insects and People• Entomologist• Disadvantages– Compete with human food– Spread diseases

• Tsetse fly, mosquitos– Attack wood in buildings– Consume wool material

• Advantages– Serve as food– Cross – pollination– Commercially valuable products– Recycle nutrients

Page 7: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper

• Demonstrate some details of insect structure and function

Page 8: Phylum Arthropoda

External• Three tagmata– Anterior

• Pair of unbranched antennae• Compound and simple eyes

– Middle/ Divided into three segments• Prothorax

– Attached to the head and 1st pr of walking legs• Mesothorax

– Forewings and 2nd pr of walking legs• Metathorax

– Attaches to abdomen, hindwings, and large jumping legs– Hindwings composed of exoskeleton

– Abdomen• Upper and lower plates

Page 9: Phylum Arthropoda

Internal

• Feeding and digestion– Mouth parts are designed for cutting and chewing• Labrum and labium (hold food)• Mandibles tear off bits• Maxillae hold and cut

– Insects have specialized mouthparts

Page 10: Phylum Arthropoda

Digestive• Food enters mouth• moistened by salivary glands• passes through the esophagus and into the crop• food passes to the gizzard • shredded mass enters the midgut• food is broken down by enzymes • secreted by gastric cace

• has pouches that branch from the digestive tract

• nutrients absorbed through the midgut• undigested matter enters the digestive tract (hindgut)• leaves through the anus

Page 11: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Digestive Tract

Page 12: Phylum Arthropoda

Circulatory• Open circulatory system– Hemolymph

• Heart (Abd,Thx) – into the coelom near the head– Hemolymph percolates through coelom • toward abdomen and thorax • moves back into the heart through pores

Page 13: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Circulatory System

Page 14: Phylum Arthropoda

Respiratory

• Circulatory system transports O2 and CO2

• Trachea– Air enters these tubes through spiracles– Thorax and abdomen– Ends near cells that are filled with fluid• O2 and CO2 diffuses

• Pumped in/out by abdomen and wings

Page 15: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Respiratory System

Page 16: Phylum Arthropoda

Excretory

• Malpighian tubules– Collect water and cellular wastes from

hemolymph– Attached to digestive tract b/w midgut and

hindgut– Return most of the water to the hemolymph

Page 17: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Excretory System

Page 18: Phylum Arthropoda

Neural Control• Brain – ventral nerve cord w/ganglia in each body

segment

• Antennae• Simple eyes and compound eyes• Tympanum– Sound – sensing organ– Membrane covered oval air – filled cavity

• Sensory hairs

Page 19: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Neurological System

Page 20: Phylum Arthropoda

Reproduction

• Separate sexes• Male deposits sperm in female seminal

receptacle• Eggs fertilize internally• Ovipositor– Last segment in female grasshoppers– Deposits fertilized eggs in soil

Page 21: Phylum Arthropoda

Grasshopper Reproductive System

Page 22: Phylum Arthropoda

Insect Development

• Metamorphosis– Developmental change– Two kinds• Complete• Incomplete

– Larval and Adult organism don’t compete– Survive harsh weather

Page 23: Phylum Arthropoda

Insect Defense

• Passive defense– Camouflage– Warning coloration– Mimicry

• Aggressive defense– Venom

Page 24: Phylum Arthropoda

Insect Behavior

• Pheromones, sound, and light– Ants, honeybees, crickets, lightening bugs

Page 25: Phylum Arthropoda