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KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Arthropoda

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Presentation on theme: "KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Arthropoda"— Presentation transcript:

1 KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Arthropoda

2 Subphylum Mandibulata

3

4 Members of the Phylum Arthropoda
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 exoskeleton that must be shed during growth. They have bilateral symmetry. The nervous system is ventral (belly) and the circulatory system is closed/open and dorsal (back).

5 Three Major Subphylum The arthropods are divided into three subphyla that exist today: Chelicerata , Mandibulata, Crustacea

6 Mandibulata Characteristics:
Mouthparts are mandibles normally chewing sideways One or two pairs of antennae Various body region arrangements depending on species cephalothorax & abdomen head & trunk head, thorax & abdomen Variable leg numbers Includes insects, chilopoda, & diplopoda

7 Review of Zoological Nomenclature Taxonomic Categories
Kingdom - Animalae Phylum – Arthropoda Subphylum - Mandibulata Class - Insecta Order - Coleoptera Family - Scarabaeidae Genus - Popillia Genus & species Popillia japonica Newman

8 Class Insects Insects are the largest group of Arthropods

9 MAIN CHARACTERISTICS Three body regions – head, thorax, and abdomen
One pair antenna (head) Six legs or 3 pairs (thorax) One-two pairs of wings (thorax)

10

11 There are ALWAYS SIX legs, and they are attached to the THORAX
Count the Legs! There are ALWAYS SIX legs, and they are attached to the THORAX

12 Antenna One Pair on head Jointed Sensory (smell) Called “feelers”
Filiform most common shape (segments = size) May be modified FILIFORM

13 Antenna Modifications

14 Wings or No Wings Most adults have 2 pairs
Called forewings and hindwings Some insects are wingless (silverfish, fleas, some termites and ants)

15 A network of Veins strengthens wings MEMBRANEOUS (clear) WINGS
More on Wings A network of Veins strengthens wings MEMBRANEOUS (clear) WINGS

16 Some Wings Are Covered With Powdery Scales
BUTTERFLIES & MOTHS

17 Wings May Be Modified Order Diptera (flies)
2nd pair of wings modified into HALTERES Used for balance Makes flies hard to catch!

18 Beetle Wings Meet in straight line down the abdomen
ELYTRA Hard Forewing called Elytra Meet in straight line down the abdomen Membranous hindwings folded underneath (flight)

19 Order Coleoptera Called beetles Tough exoskeleton
Forewings called Elytra Fly with membranous hindwings Larva called grubs Cucumber beetle Ladybird beetle Rhinoceros beetle

20 Order Diptera Contains mosquitoes & flies One pair functional wings
Club-shaped halteres for balance Bodies often hairy Green Bottle fly Hover Fly Aedes Mosquito Fruit Fly

21 Order Orthoptera Grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, katydids
Very long bodies Rear legs modified for jumping Females with egg laying tube (ovipositor on end of abdomen) Often communicate with chirping sounds

22 Order Lepidoptera Moths, butterflies, & skippers
Siphoning mouthparts coiled under head Powdery scales on wings Butterflies fold wings flat above body at rest Moths are night active Important plant pollinators

23 Order Hymenoptera Bees, ants, wasps
Narrow waist connects thorax & abdomen Abdomen curved downward May have stinger on end of abdomen Carpenter bee Red ant Yellow jacket

24 Insect Anatomy

25

26 Chelicerata Characteristics:
Pincher-like mouthparts (chelicerae) and pedipalps NO antennae Two body regions, usually - cephalothorax & abdomen Four pairs of legs Horseshoe crabs and arachnids are the only living groups. Arachnids include scorpions, pseudoscorpions, daddy long-legs, mites & ticks, spiders

27 Scorpion Anatomy

28

29 chelicerae eyes pedipalp

30 Pseudoscorpion

31 Spider Anatomy pedipalp chelicera (fang) cephalothorax narrow waist
abdomen

32 Jumping Spider Abdomen Cephalothorax Chelicera (fang) Pedipalp

33 Wolf spider with egg case
Spitting spider Orb-weaving spider Tarantula

34 Black widow with egg case
Brown recluse

35 Crustacean Anatomy

36 Classes of Crustacea all have two pair of antennae
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

37 Crayfish cephalothorax
(Decapoda) Sowbug (Isopoda), a terrestrial crustacean

38 (many legged arthropods)
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

39 trunk with many pairs of legs
Myriapods one pair of antennae head & trunk regions trunk with many pairs of legs 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.

40 Millipede (Diplopoda)
Centipede (Chilopoda) Garden centipede

41 Orders of Arachnids Scorpions Pseudoscorpions Daddy Long-Legs
Mites & Ticks Spiders

42 Pseudoscorpion Tick (a mite) Scorpion Wolf Spider Daddy-long-legs

43 Mite and Tick Body Regions
pedipalps & chelicerae cephalothorax abdomen

44 American dog tick male Blacklegged (deer) tick female

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

46 Clover mites Twospotted spider mites Predatory mite

47 daddy long-legs cephalothorax abdomen


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