1 / 8

Joint-Legged Animals 465/8

Joint-Legged Animals 465/8. By: Amina Nur. Animals With Exoskeletons (Phylum Arthropoda ). In terms of numbers, Arthropods dominate animal life 9 000 000 arthropods are estimated to be undiscovered All have segmented bodies, suggesting evolution from segmented Annelid Worms

ipo
Télécharger la présentation

Joint-Legged Animals 465/8

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. Joint-Legged Animals 465/8 By: Amina Nur

  2. Animals With Exoskeletons(Phylum Arthropoda) • In terms of numbers, Arthropods dominate animal life • 9 000 000 arthropods are estimated to be undiscovered • All have segmented bodies, suggesting evolution from segmented Annelid Worms • Segments become more specialized in higher Arthropods, nearly all segments differ in function • They developed exoskeletons, joint legs and a hemocoel(blood cavity) • Exoskeleton is a thick external covering composed of strong waterproof carbohydrate molecules called Chitin • Protects animal, resists desiccation (drying out) in non aquatic environments, allowing them on land • Rigidity prevents efficient locomotion • Evolved appendages and groups of muscles which evolved into joints increasing mobility • No longer needed coelom to provide body shape • Reduced ability for gas exchanged. Aquatic arthropods developed gills that took in O2 and expelled CO2 • Many arthropods evolved Tracheae to carry O2 to body • Rigidity hindered growth, they shed exoskeleton when they grew and replaced them with a bigger one (adapted by moulting) • Circulatory system has a hemocoel • Over time their bodies replaced body fluid with bloodwhich travelled through vessels and emitted into hemocoel • It bathed organs directly in an arrangement called Open Circulatory system • Developed sensory receptors: eyes and antennae

  3. Segments of exoskeleton modified in different arthropod groups. Specialized regions, modified, joint appendages, and groups of muscles improved arthropod function and mobility.

  4. Class Arachnida • Includes: Scorpions, spiders, mites and ticks • Body has 2 parts: head fusing to body segments forming cephalothorax • Posterior body segments (abdomen) contain most organs • Arachnids have 6 pairs of appendages – each for different functions: • To feed • Sense environment • The last 4 are used to walk Reproduction: • Male inserts sperm into small sac in the female called the seminal receptacle where fertilization occurs Life cycle: • Miniature adults hatch from eggs and live independently from the time they hatch • Gas exchanges through book lungs (highly folded membranes) in abdomen • Silk glands in spiders’ abdomen produce protein threads for spinning webs • Many spiders build webs with their silk, but some use their long threads to mate or protect young

  5. Class Crustacea • 40, 000 species • 3 Regions make up body: • Head • Thorax • Abdomen • Exoskeleton forms thick carapace (covers head + other segments) • 2 appendages, antennae, followed by the mandibles • Mandibles crush food and feed it to the mouth • Behind mandibles, a pair of millipedes – sense environment, search for food • Behind that, large claw like Chelipeds grab food and protect themselves from predators • Four legs follow the Chelipeds • On the abdomen, 6 pairs of swimmerets help crustacean swim • Pair of flat appendages (Uropod) lie on tail (Telson) behind posterior end of abdomen • These act as paddles, moving the animal backwards • They have many gills, connected to walking legs, which is protected by Carapace • Gils are feathered to increase gas exchange surface area • Gases in water diffuse into and out of the gills and travel through the circulatory system to body tissues • To increase diffusion through blood vessels of gills, swimmerets on telson beat and sweep water forward, under carapace and over the gills. • Males and females come together to copulate

  6. Class Insecta • Numerous of all animals species • + 1.5 million species • Insect bodies are like those of a crustacean • On their heads one antenna senses the environment • On the thorax, there are 3 pairs of legs • Gas exchanged carried out through air sacs and tubes (trachea) • Adults of flying insects, usually have two pairs of stiff membranous wings attached to the thorax • Flies have only one. In beetles, front wings form hardened wing covers • Separate sexes to produce egg and sperm • Some insects undergo simple development, hatching like miniature adults • Winged insect undergo complex developments • Body structure changes radically in process of metamorphosis – change of shape and diet • Transform from worm-like larva maturing through each instar, or early stages into adults • Diet change minimizes the competition for food between larvae and adults • This increase species’ chances for survival

  7. Class Diplopods and Chilopods • Diploids  millipedes • Millipede suggest the insect has thousands of feet • Members of this class only have about a hundred pair of legs • Number of segments in the body range from 10 – 100 • Each segment has 2 pairs of feet (Diplopod means ‘double footed’) • Chilopods are known as centipedes • Like Diplopods, Chilopods only have about 10 – 100 pairs of legs • Each segment contains only one pair • Chilopods: • Diplopods:

  8. Joint-Legged Animals By: Amina Nur  Biology sucks…we all know nobody was really listening…

More Related