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Myriapods, Hexapods.

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Presentation on theme: "Myriapods, Hexapods."— Presentation transcript:

1 Myriapods, Hexapods

2 Subphylum Hexapoda + Subphylum Myriapoda
(primarily) terrestrial mandibulates Paired mouthparts- chewing/grinding/tearing Homopteran Orthopteran movie

3 Subphylum Hexapoda + Subphylum Myriapoda
Uniramous (unbranched) appendages Biramous appendage

4 Subphylum Hexapoda + Subphylum Myriapoda
One pair of antennae

5 Subphylum Hexapoda + Subphylum Myriapoda
Use tracheae to carry respiratory gasses Chitin-lined invaginations of epithelium Open to the outside via spiracles Chitin- lined to reduce water loss

6 Subphylum Hexapoda + Subphylum Myriapoda
Excretion by Malpighian tubules Almost all insects, some myriapods, some spiders Nitrogenous waste (ammonia) removed by converting into uric acid. Energy costly. In aquatic insects, ammonia simply diffuses out of the body into surrounding water. Excretion of uric acid minimizes water loss. Nearly half of the food energy a terrestrial insect consumes may be used to process metabolic wastes. Some water, ions, organic compounds are reabsorbed in the basal portion of the Malppighian tubules and the hindgut; the rest are reabsorbed in the rectum. Uric acid moves into the hindgut and is excreted

7 Excretion by Malpighian tubules (cont’d)
Blind-ended tubules bathed in hemolymph Remove nitrogenous waste (e.g. uric acid), amino acids, sugars Nitrogenous waste (ammonia) removed by converting into uric acid. Energy costly. In aquatic insects, ammonia simply diffuses out of the body into surrounding water. Excretion of uric acid minimizes water loss. Nearly half of the food energy a terrestrial insect consumes may be used to process metabolic wastes. Some water, ions, organic compounds are reabsorbed in the basal portion of the Malppighian tubules and the hindgut; the rest are reabsorbed in the rectum. Uric acid moves into the hindgut and is excreted

8 Excretion by Malpighian tubules (cont’d)
Minerals, water resorbed at bottom of tubule and by rectal glands of hindgut waste passed out Nitrogenous waste (ammonia) removed by converting into uric acid. Energy costly. In aquatic insects, ammonia simply diffuses out of the body into surrounding water. Excretion of uric acid minimizes water loss. Nearly half of the food energy a terrestrial insect consumes may be used to process metabolic wastes. Some water, ions, organic compounds are reabsorbed in the basal portion of the Malppighian tubules and the hindgut; the rest are reabsorbed in the rectum. Uric acid moves into the hindgut and is excreted

9 Myriapods

10 Subphylum Myriapoda “many footed” Class Chilopoda Class Diplopoda

11 Class Chilopoda centipedes Serial segmented, flattened body
each segment has a pair of jointed appendages

12 Class Chilopoda (cont’d)
Active predators kill prey with poison claws and fangs (modified legs on first segment)

13 Class Diplopoda Millipedes Serially segmented, rounded body

14 Class Diplopoda 2 smaller pairs of legs per segment
Slow moving; feed on decaying plants movie

15 Subphylum Hexapoda Includes Class Insecta
Beetles, grasshoppers, butterflies, flies, bees… Movie movie

16 Class Insecta

17 Most Abundant and Diverse Animal Class
1,000,000+ species identified May as many as 10,000,000 More than all other animals combined

18 Distribution of Insects
Air land In the soil Parasites Plants Animals Freshwater

19 Reasons for insect success
Small size Reproductive potential Co-evolution with plants Evolution of flight Metamorphosis

20 Characteristics of Insects
Three body regions Head Thorax Abdomen Three pair of legs

21 Characteristics (cont)
wings Absent in some Pair of compound eyes Spiracles for respiration

22 External Structure of a Generalized Insect
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. External Structure of a Generalized Insect

23 Internal Structure of a Generalized Insect
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Internal Structure of a Generalized Insect Fig. 15.8 15-6

24 External structure of insects
Head one pair of antennae

25 External structure of insects
Head pair of compound eyes (detect movement) several sets of simple eyes= ocelli (probably detect changes in light intensity) Mosquito compound eye

26 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Head Antennae can be highly variable Mosquito antennae

27 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Mouthparts are highly modified depending on the type of insect for piercing and sucking (ie. mosquitos) movie

28 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Mouthparts are highly modified depending on the type of insect for chewing (ie. grasshoppers) movie

29 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Mouthparts are highly modified depending on the type of insect for siphoning (ie. butterflies) movie

30 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Mouthparts are highly modified depending on the type of insect for sponging (ie. flies) Movie damselfly eating moth

31 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Thorax consists of three regions: Prothorax (anterior-most segment) Mesothorax Metathorax One pair of legs attaches along ventral margin of each thoracic region

32 External structure of insects (cont’d)
Insects may have 1 pair, 2 pair, or no wings Insects are the only invertebrates that can fly movie Drosophila melanogaster Archaeognatha (bristletail)

33 Wings of insects= modified exoskeleton
1st pair is often tough and leathery (protection) fold over the inner pair .

34 Attach to mesothorax and metathorax
Have thickened, hollow veins for increased strength .

35 Abdomen does not have appendages

36 Abdomen terminal portions harbor the reproductive structures

37 Insects undergo metamorphosis

38 Metamorphosis Change in form from one developmental stage to another
Yellow bear caterpillar Change in form from one developmental stage to another Immature and adult body forms May not compete May be incomplete or complete Monarch butterfly chrysalis Apollo butterfly

39 Incomplete Metamorphosis
cockroach Early developmental stages very similar to adults only the wings and reproductive structures gradually develop

40 Incomplete metamorphosis (cont’d)
cockroach The immature stages = nymphs egg---> nymphs ----> adult

41 Complete metamorphosis
Each stage is structurally and functionally very different

42 Complete metamorphosis (cont’d)
The egg develops into an immature larva; eats voraciously movie

43 Complete metamorphosis (cont’d)
Followed by a transitional stage - pupa, contained within cocoon

44 Complete metamorphosis (cont’d)
Metamorphosis occurs within the pupal exoskeleton, yielding a sexually mature adult movie

45 Beneficial Insects Honey bee Honey Pollinates crops

46 Beneficial Insects Silkworm moth Lava produces silk

47 Beneficial Insects Breakdown dung

48 Beneficial Insects Blow fly Decompose dead bodies

49 Beneficial Insects Lady bug Eats harmful insects
Saved California citrus in ’20s

50 Beneficial Insects Some wasps Kill harmful insects movie Parasitoid
Larvae live in body of host, eventually killing it movie

51 Fruit Fly Drosophila Genetics research

52 Some genes are highly conserved among organisms
NCBI From Molecular cell biology 5e, Lodish

53 Harmful Insects Boll weevil Destroys cotton

54 Harmful Insects Tent caterpillar Pest of many trees and shrubs

55 Harmful Insects Mosquitos Vector Malaria Yellow fever Encephalitis
West Nile virus Movie Web-linked movie, better

56 Harmful Insects Flea Vector for Plague Xenopsylla Cheopis

57 Xenopsylla Cheopis Rat flea Vector for plague

58 Black Death Bubonic plague 1357-1350 killed 25,000,000 in Europe
1900’s killed 20,000,000 in India

59 Plague Survivor

60

61 Alexandre Yersin Discovered bacterium Yersinia pestis
Treated with antibiotics


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