1 / 112

Biology - Chapter 28 “Arthropods”

Biology - Chapter 28 “Arthropods”. Charles Page High School Stephen L. Cotton. Section 28-1 Introduction to Arthropods. OBJECTIVES: Describe the four subphyla of arthropods. Section 28-1 Introduction to Arthropods. OBJECTIVES: Explain how arthropods perform their essential life functions.

Rita
Télécharger la présentation

Biology - Chapter 28 “Arthropods”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Biology - Chapter 28“Arthropods” Charles Page High School Stephen L. Cotton

  2. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • OBJECTIVES: • Describe the four subphyla of arthropods.

  3. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • OBJECTIVES: • Explain how arthropods perform their essential life functions.

  4. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • OBJECTIVES: • Discuss metamorphosis in arthropods.

  5. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Phylum Arthropoda - vary enormously in size, shape, and habits • More than a million arthropod species have been described, and scientists are certain many more have not yet been found (such as in the tropics)

  6. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Phylum Arthropoda is subdivided into four subphyla: • 1. Subphylum Trilobita • trilobites are thought to be the oldest subphylum • these were dwellers in ancient seas; they are now all extinct

  7. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Phylum Arthropods is subdivided into four subphyla: • 2. Subphylum Chelicerata • chelicerates include spiders, ticks, mites, scorpions, and horseshoe crabs

  8. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Phylum Arthropods is subdivided into four subphyla: • 3. Subphylum Crustacea • crustaceans include such familiar (and edible) organisms as crabs, shrimp, crayfish

  9. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Phylum Arthropods is subdivided into four subphyla: • 4. Subphylum Uniramia • includes most arthropods: centipedes, millipedes, and all insects (bees, moths, flies, grasshoppers, beetles)

  10. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Why are there so many? • Been evolving on Earth for a long time; the first appeared in the sea more than 600 million years ago • colonized all parts of the sea and most freshwater habitats, as well as the land

  11. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The ancestors of the arthropods were soft-bodied animals that left few fossils • early forms are thought to be similar to that of the trilobites • a thick, tough outer covering, and composed of many segments with appendages

  12. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The appendages were branched into one walking leg and one gill • Figure 28-3, page 608 • Most today exhibit two trends away from trilobites: • 1. Fewer body segments • 2. Appendages more specialized

  13. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Although there are many different types of arthropods, they all have three important arthropod features: • 1. Tough exoskeleton • 2. Series of jointed appendages • 3. Segmented body

  14. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Also have: • brain, located in dorsal part of head • ventral nerve cord • open circulatory system, powered by a single heart

  15. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The exoskeleton is made of chitin (a protein) • some are leathery and flexible • others are extremely hard • exoskeleton provides protection from physical damage and also support; many are waterproof

  16. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Although the exoskeleton acts like a “suit of armor”, it has some disadvantages • cannot grow as the animal grows • movement only at the joints • very heavy if the animal was to grow large

  17. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • All arthropods have jointed appendages (arthro- means joint; -pod means foot) that enable them to move • remaining appendages evolved into adaptations for different environments: antennae; claws; walking legs; wings; flippers

  18. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • All arthropods have segmented bodies • some have worm-like bodies, such as centipedes and millipedes • others have lost some of the body segments, or have fused them together, such as insects

  19. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 1. Feeding- almost any type of food we can imagine • herbivores; carnivores; parasites; filter feeders; detritus feeders (Figure 28-6, p.610) • some herbivores are selective, and others will eat just about anything green

  20. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 2. Respiration- 3 basic types of respiratory structures: • a) gills; b) book gills and book lungs; and c) tracheal tubes • many aquatic varieties, such as crabs and shrimp, have gills that look like a row of feathers under cover of their exoskeleton

  21. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The gills are formed from the same structures as the mouthparts and legs • movement of the mouthparts and legs keeps a steady stream of water moving over the gills

  22. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Book gills (found in the horseshoe crabs) and book lungs (found in spiders and relatives) are unique to these arthropods • several sheets of tissue are layered like pages of a book; this increases the surface area for gas exchange

  23. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • An opening called the spiracle connects the sac containing the book lungs with the fresh air outside • Most terrestrial arthropods (insects for example) have another unique structure- long branching tracheal tubes

  24. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • From spiracles, long branching tracheal tubes reach deep into the animal’s tissues • supplies oxygen by diffusion • as they move, body muscles cause the tracheae to shrink and expand; thus filling with air; works well in small animals

  25. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 3. Internal transport- a well developed heart pumps blood through an open circulatory system • blood leaves the vessels, and moves through spaces in the tissue called sinuses

  26. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 4. Excretion- solid waste leaves through the anus • nitrogen-containing wastes from cellular metabolism are removed in a variety of ways • a) insects and spiders have Malpighian tubules that filter the blood

  27. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • b) aquatic arthropods have wastes diffuse into the surrounding water at unarmored places, such as gills • c) some, such as lobster, have a green gland located near the base of the antennae; emptied through openings on head

  28. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 5. Response- many have well developed nervous systems • all have a brain, consisting of a pair of ganglia in the head; this is the central switchboard for incoming information and outgoing instructions

  29. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Nerve cord runs on ventral side of the body; along this nerve cord are additional ganglia that serve as local command centers • these coordinate legs and wings; this is why they might still move even though the head has been cut off!

  30. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Simple sense organs such as statocysts and chemical receptors • also have compound eyes; more than 2000 separate lenses; can detect color and movement very well • may see ultraviolet light

  31. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • May have well-developed sense of taste, although the receptors are located in strange places • not only on the mouthparts, but also on antennae and legs

  32. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Many insects have well-developed ears that hear sounds above the human range, but the ears are in odd places • eardrums in grasshoppers, for example, are behind their legs • spiders are sensitive to vibrations in their webs

  33. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The arthropods well-developed sense organs allow it to detect and escape predators • this is in combination with their protective exoskeleton • but, there are also additional methods of protection

  34. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Venomous stings- bees, ants • powerful claws- lobsters, crabs • nasty chemicals- millipedes • creating a diversion- drop claw • visual trickery- matching color and texture of surroundings • imitate other dangerous species- called mimicry (p.614)

  35. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 6. Movement- well-developed muscle systems coordinated by nervous system (Figure 28-13, p.614) • the pull of muscles on the exoskeleton allows them to beat wings to fly; push legs to walk or jump; or beat flippers against water to swim

  36. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • 7. Reproduction- usually very simple • male produces sperm; female produces egg • fertilization usually takes place inside the body of the female • ** Stop Day #1

  37. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Growth and Development- the exoskeleton (as useful as they are), present a problem in growth • it does not grow as the animal does; thus must be replaced • arthropods will molt, or shed their exoskeleton; controlled by several hormones

  38. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Steps in molting: • 1. Produce molting hormone • 2. Digest inner parts of exoskeleton to recycle chemicals • 3. Form new exoskeleton; shed old exoskeleton • 4. Harden new exoskeleton

  39. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • The animal must wait for the new exoskeleton to harden; may only be a few hours or a few days • quite vulnerable during this time; thus they might need to hide from predators

  40. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • This molting may take place several times • in most cases, it will involve metamorphosis- a change in form • there are two forms of metamorphosis

  41. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Metamorphosis: • 1. Incomplete metamorphosis hatches eggs into young animals that look like small adults; lack functioning sexual organs and wings • Figure 28-15, page 615 for the grasshopper on the left

  42. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Metamorphosis: • 2. Complete metamorphosis involves four stages: • a) the egg • b) larvae (a wormlike stage that does not look like the adults) • c) pupa (an inactive stage that totally rearranges the body) • d) the adult

  43. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Hormone interaction: • high levels of juvenile hormone keep an insect in the larval form; when it drops below a certain point- it becomes pupa • molting hormone controls the molting process

  44. Section 28-1Introduction to Arthropods • Because of the balance of juvenile hormone, molting hormone, and others- it is possible to combat insects by tampering with their hormone levels • can prevent molting; thus no adults, and no reproduction!

  45. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • OBJECTIVES: • Discuss the distinguishing characteristics of chelicerates.

  46. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • OBJECTIVES: • Describe and give examples of members of the two main groups of animals in the subphylum Chelicerata.

  47. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • OBJECTIVES: • Explain how arachnids obtain food.

  48. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • Subphylum Chelicerata- called chelicerates, includes spiders and their relatives- horseshoe crabs, ticks, and scorpions • characterized by a two-part body and mouthparts called “chelicerae”

  49. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • also lack sensory “feelers” found on the heads of most other arthropods • the two-part body is: • 1. Cephalothorax • 2. Abdomen

  50. Section 28-2Spiders and their Relatives • Cephalothorax- contains the brain, eyes, mouth and mouthparts, and esophagus • posterior end is the first part of the digestive system, and several pairs of walking legs • Abdomen- contains most of the internal organs (Fig. 28-17, p.617)

More Related