Arthropods

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Arthropods

description

Arthropods. What is Entomology?. The study of insects (and their near relatives). What are insects (and near relatives)?. Insects and their relatives are ARTHROPODS. Review of Zoological Nomenclature (classifying & naming). Taxonomic Categories. Phylum Class Order Family - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Arthropods

Page 1: Arthropods

Arthropods

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What is Entomology?

The study of insects (and their near relatives).

What are insects (and near relatives)?

Insects and their relatives areARTHROPODS.

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Review of Zoological Nomenclature(classifying & naming)

Taxonomic Categories

PhylumClass

OrderFamily

GenusGenus & species

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Review of Zoological Nomenclature

Taxonomic Categories

Kingdom - AnimalaePhylum - Arthropoda

Class - InsectaOrder - Coleoptera

Family - ScarabaeidaeGenus - Popillia

Genus & speciesPopillia japonica Newman

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Characteristics of the PhylumArthropoda

The segmented bodies are arranged into regions, called tagmata (e.g., head, thorax, abdomen).

The paired appendages (e.g., legs, antennae) are jointed.

They posses a chitinous exoskeletion that must be shed during growth.

They have bilateral symmetry.

The nervous system is dorsal (belly) and the circulatory system is open and ventral (back).

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What are some other Animal Phyla?

Porifera & Cnidaria – sponges & corals.

Platyhelminthes - flatworms, tapeworms

Nematoda - roundworms

Mollusca - clams, snails & slugs, squids

Echinodermata - starfish, sea urchins

Annelida - segmented worms (earthworms)

Chordata - fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals

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Arthropod Groups (taxa)

The arthropods are divided into two large groups that exist today:

Chelicerates

and

Mandibulates

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Chelicerate Arthropod Characters:

Pincher-like mouthparts - chelicerae - and pedipalps

NO antennae

Two body regions, usually - cephalothorax & abdomen

Four pairs of legs

Horseshoe crabs and arachnids are only living groups

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Mandibulate Arthropod Characters:

Mouthparts are mandibles - normally chewing sideways

One or two pairs of antennae

Various body region arrangements - cephalothorax & abdomen / head & trunk / head, thorax & abdomen

Variable leg numbers

Insects, crustaceans & myriapods

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Orders of Arachnids

Scorpions

Pseudoscorpions

Daddy Long-Legs

Mites & Ticks

Spiders

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Scorpion Tick(a mite)

Pseudoscorpion

Daddy-long-legs

WolfSpider

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Scorpion Anatomy

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chelicerae eyes pedipalp

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Pseudoscorpion

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pedipalps &chelicerae

cephalothorax

abdomen

Mite and Tick Body Regions

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American dog tick male

Blacklegged (deer) tick female

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American dog tick female laying egg mass (1000-2000 eggs!).

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Clover mites

Twospotted spider mites

Predatory mite

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daddy long-legs

cephalothorax abdomen

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pedipalp

chelicera (fang)

cephalothorax

abdomen

narrow waist

Spider Anatomy

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Abdomen

Pedipalp

Chelicera (fang)

Cephalothorax

Jumping Spider

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Wolf spider with egg case Spitting spider

TarantulaOrb-weaving spider

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Black widow with egg case

Brown recluse

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Classes of Myriapods(many legged arthropods)

(all have one pair of antennae, a head region, and trunk with many pairs of legs, use trachea)

Diplopoda - millipedes

Chilopoda - centipedes

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Myriapods

Millipede (Diplopoda)

Two pair of legs per visible segment, attached under body.

Centipede (Chilopoda)

Pair of fangs under head, one pair legs per visible segment - attached to side of body.

No fangs, no eyes, legs attached to side of body.

[one pair of antennae, head & trunk regions, trunk with many pairs of legs]

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Millipede (Diplopoda)

Centipede (Chilopoda)

Garden centipede

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Classes of Crustacea• mostly marine, fresh water, a few terrestrial• all have two pair of antennae• five or more pairs of legs• segmented abdominal appendages• head & trunk or cephalothorax & abdomen body arrangement• have gills

Sowbugs or pillbugs

Sand fleas

Barnacles

Crabs, lobster, shrimp

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Crayfish cephalothorax(Decapoda)

Sowbug (Isopoda), a terrestrial crustacean

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