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Table of Contents Mollusks Arthropods Insects Insect Ecology

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Presentation on theme: "Table of Contents Mollusks Arthropods Insects Insect Ecology"— Presentation transcript:

1 Table of Contents Mollusks Arthropods Insects Insect Ecology
Echinoderms

2 The Animal Kingdom Chapter 2: Mollusks, Arthropods and Echinoderms

3 Phylum Mollusca: Snails, Clams, Squid
Characteristics: All have soft bodies and bilateral symmetry. The Latin word, “mollis” means “soft”. Most secret hard, calcium carbonate shells to protect themselves.

4 - Mollusks Although they don’t look much alike at first, a snail, a clam, and a squid have the same basic body structures.

5 Basic body pattern of most mollusks:
1. Head: containing the mouth 2. Muscular foot: for crawling, digging, or swimming. 3. Mantle: a thin layer of tissue that surrounds the main body organs. The mantle secretes the shell. 4. Gills: used to breath oxygen from water.

6 Classes of mollusks include:
Gastropoda (stomach-foot) —snails, slugs, and sea slugs. *One shell (univalve) *Live in the water or on land *Make beautiful sea shells

7 *Use a flexible ribbon of tiny teeth called a radula to get food.
*Some are herbivores *Some are carnivores Mouth Radula Radula Teeth

8 Bivalvia (two-shells)-- clams, oysters, scallops and mussels.
*Filter feeders—most are omnivores *Economically important as food *Used in production of pearls.

9 A razor clam digs into the mud by changing the shape of its foot.
- Mollusks A razor clam digs into the mud by changing the shape of its foot.

10 3. Cephalopoda (head-foot) —octopus, squid, cuttlefish, and chambered nautilus.
*Muscular foot is divided into tentacles for swimming. *Complex and intelligent. *Range in size from 1-60 feet. *Carnivores *Crawl or swim by jet propulsion

11 Not all cephalopods have a shell
Octopus—no shell Squid—internal shell Chambered Nautilus external shell

12 Octopus Killing Shark Video
Cool Videos!! Never underestimate the skills of the octopus! (45 sec) (2 min 01 sec) Octopus Escape Video Octopus Killing Shark Video

13 Phylum Arthropoda: Jointed Legs
Characteristics: Largest group of animals with over 1 million species known. That number may be as high as 10 million.

14 Exoskeleton made of chitin
Exoskeleton made of chitin. Must be shed from time to time in a process called molting. Segmented bodies All have jointed appendages (legs, antenna, pinchers and claws) Open circulatory system Bilateral symmetry One-way digestive tract

15 Five classes: Arachnida, Crustacea, Chilopoda, Diplopoda, Insecta

16 Crustaceans: crabs, lobsters, crayfish, shrimp and pill bugs. *Most have two body regions: cephalothorax and abdomen. *Five pairs of appendages including large pinchers on most. *Most have two pair of antenna

17 Fiddler crab Pill Bug Crayfish

18 abdomen cephalothorax.
2. Arachnids: spiders, scorpions, mites and ticks. *Most have two body regions: abdomen cephalothorax. *simple eyes *poison glands, fangs or stingers *four pair of legs

19 Spiders are found everywhere
Spiders are found everywhere. They spin webs using spinnerets in their abdomen.

20 Scorpions are found in tropical areas and hunt insects and spiders.

21 Ticks are external parasites that feed on the blood of a host
Ticks are external parasites that feed on the blood of a host. Some transmit Lyme Disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Mites are usually found in dust and are mostly harmless.

22 *Long, flat bodies with one pair of legs per body segment.
3. Chilopoda: centipedes *Long, flat bodies with one pair of legs per body segment. *Carnivores: eat snails, slugs and worms and can bite humans.

23 4. Diplopoda: millipedes
Long, rounded bodies with two pairs of legs per body segment. Plant eaters: will not bite humans

24 5. Insects: largest group of arthropods
Three body segments: head, thorax and abdomen. Three pairs of legs attached to the thorax. One pair of antenna. Some have one or two pairs of wings; some have no wings. Large, compound eyes; some also have simple eyes. Open circulatory system.

25 Antenna Wings Thorax Head Abdomen Compound Eyes 3 Pair of Legs

26 Click the SciLinks button for links on arthropods.

27 All insects undergo metamorphosis *This is a process in which an
animal’s body undergoes dramatic changes in its life cycle. *Two types of metamorphosis: Complete and Gradual

28 -Stages of Complete Metamorphosis: *Egg, Larva, Pupa, Adult
(Beetles, bees, butterflies, flies and ants use complete metamorphosis)

29 - Insects Life Cycle An insect with complete metamorphosis has four different stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult.

30 Stages of Gradual Metamorphosis: *Egg, Nymph, Adult
(Grasshoppers, termites, cockroaches and dragonflies use gradual metamorphosis)

31 - Insects An insect with gradual metamorphosis has no distinct larval stage. An egg hatches into a stage called a nymph, which usually looks like the adult insect without wings.

32 More on Insect Metamorphosis
- Insects More on Insect Metamorphosis Click the PHSchool.com button for an activity about insect metamorphosis.

33 - Arthropods Lyme Disease Cases The graph shows the number of cases of Lyme disease by age group reported by Connecticut during one year.

34 Lyme Disease Cases Reading Graphs:
- Arthropods Lyme Disease Cases Reading Graphs: What variable is plotted on the y-axis? What does the first bar tell you? Cases per 100,000 people; the first bar indicates that for every 100,000 children under the age of 10, 200 had Lyme disease.

35 - Arthropods Lyme Disease Cases Interpreting Data: Which age group is least at risk for Lyme disease? Explain. 20–29 year-olds; just over 50 per 100,000 people were infected.

36 - Arthropods Lyme Disease Cases Interpreting Data: Which two age groups are most at risk? Children under 10 and people between the ages of 50 and 59

37 Lyme Disease Cases Calculating:
- Arthropods Lyme Disease Cases Calculating: Suppose a particular school in Connecticut has 1,000 students aged 10–19. About how many of these students would you expect to get Lyme disease per year? One or two students

38 Click the Video button to watch a movie about insect adaptations.
- Insects Insect Adaptations Click the Video button to watch a movie about insect adaptations.

39 Phylum Echinodermata: Seastars
6,000 species of spiny-skinned animals All have radial symmetry. “Echinoderm” means “spiny-skin”. Have an internal skeleton made of spines that extend out through the body.

40 All live in the ocean. Move using a water-vascular system and tube feet. Most can regenerate lost body parts and can occasionally reproduce this way.

41 Characteristics of Echinoderms
Echinoderms, such as this sea star, have a water vascular system that helps them move and catch food. Tube Feet Stomach Madreporite Water Vascular System

42 Water Vascular System Activity
- Echinoderms Water Vascular System Activity Click the Active Art button to open a browser window and access Active Art about the water vascular system.

43 Examples of echinoderms:
1. Sea stars and brittle stars: have 5 or more arms lined with tube feet. Feed on clams by inserting their stomach into the clam and digesting it inside the shell.

44 2. Sea urchins and sand dollars: do not have arms
2. Sea urchins and sand dollars: do not have arms. Covered with movable spines used for defense and movement.

45 3. Sea cucumbers: leathery skin with no spines
3. Sea cucumbers: leathery skin with no spines. Spits out its internal organs to confuse predators.


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