|
|
|
AP BIOLOGY:
Chapter Forty-One Outline
INTRODUCTION
Development of Jointed Appendages
First accomplished by the arthropods
Necessary adaptation with advent of rigid exoskeleton
Success of the Arthropods
Includes nearly two-thirds of all named species on earth
May include 30 million species of insects alone
Are abundant in all habitats, but dominate terrestrial regions
Economic Importance
Cause extensive damage to food crops
Are important human food source
Pollinate crops, control insects and weeds
Produce products like silk and honey
Critical importance in recycling organic matter
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ARTHROPODS
Possess Characteristic Jointed Appendages
Phylum name means "jointed feet"
Appendages modified into antennae, mouthparts and legs
Other External Characteristics
Bodies are segmented
Some members have large numbers of segments
In others the segments are fused into functional units: tagma fig 41.1
Process called tagmatization
Segmentation may be more obvious during development of larvae
Head and thorax may be fused into a cephalothorax
Have rigid external skeleton: exoskeleton
Immature forms may not resemble adult form
May change characteristics in metamorphosis from egg to adult
Members are generally small in size
MAJOR GROUPS OF ARTHROPODS
Primarily Categorized by Modifications of Anterior Appendages fig 41.2
Mandibulates have modified mandibles
Anterior, but not the most anterior appendages
Include crustaceans, insects, centipedes, millipedes
Most anterior appendages are sensory antennae
Chelicerates lack mandibles and instead possess chelicerae
Include spiders, mites, scorpions
Evolved from very most anterior appendages
May appear as pincers or fangs
Secondarily Categorized Anatomy of All Appendages
Aquatic mandibulates
Appendages are biramous (two-branched) fig 41.3
Typical of crustaceans
Possess nauplius larva fig 41.4
Terrestrial mandibulates
Appendages are uniramous (one-branched)
Typical of insects, centipedes, millipedes
Also characteristic of phylum Onychophora
Mandibles evolved independently in terrestrial and aquatic mandibulates
Mandibulates and chelicerates evolved independently, neither gave rise to other
Second chelicerate appendages are pincer or feelerlike, followed by legs
Chelicerae resemble other chelicerate appendages more closely than mandible resemble other mandibulate appendages
EXTERNAL FEATURES
Exoskeleton
All arthropods covered by hardened skeleton or cuticle
Tough outer covering is secreted by and fused with epidermis
Varies in toughness and thickness
Crustaceans add calcium carbonate, making it less flexible
Functions of exoskeleton
Prevents excessive water loss
Protects from predators, parasites and injury
Growth requires periodic ecdysis
New exoskeleton grown beneath old one
Controlled by hormones
Separated by a fluid that dissolves components of old skeleton
Old skeleton cracks open and is shed
New skeleton is initially quite soft and must be expanded to full size
Hardens with exposure to air or water
Compound Eye fig 41.5
Composed of many ommatidia: independent visual units
Each covered with a lens
Linked to eight retinula cells and central light-sensitive rhabdom
Apposition eyes
Example: bee
Each ommatidium acts in isolation
Surrounded by pigment cells
An image inverted on each ommatidium retina
Individual images formed in brain
Superposition eyes
Example: moth
Images from ommatidia are combined on cornea at rear of eye
Not associated with pigment cells
Single right-side-up image is formed
Ocelli are simple eyes with single lenses fig 41.5b
Sometimes occur together with compound eyes
Function in distinguishing light and darkness
May also serve as horizon detectors in locusts and dragonflies
INTERNAL FEATURES fig 41.6
Reduction of Coelom Through the Course of Evolution
Consists of cavities housing reproductive organs and some glands
Arthropods completely lack cilia
Have tubular gut that extends from mouth to anus
Circulatory System fig 41.6b
Open system, no closed blood vessels
Longitudinal heart along dorsal thorax and abdomen
With contraction, blood flows into head
When heart relaxes blood returns it
Series of one-way valves in posterior of heart allows blood to flow inward only
Blood from anterior end flows through spaces to posterior end
Flow is more rapid with greater activity
Blood delivers nutrients, transports wastes
Respiratory System
Functions to transport oxygen directly to tissues
All parts of body must be near air passage limiting body size
Possess no single respiratory organ, but a system of branched tracheae fig 41.7
Become smaller tracheoles that are in contact with individual cells
Air passage controlled through external spiracles
Closing spiracles conserves water
Air flow assisted by muscular movements in larger organisms
Many chelicerates have book lungs or book gills
A series of leaflike plates within a chamber
Air drawn in and out by muscular contractions
These respiratory systems unique to arthropods and Onychophora
Crustaceans have typical gills
Excretory System
Several forms of excretory systems
Principal components of the land mandibulate are Malpighian tubules fig 41.6b
Slender projections of the digestive tract
Located at the junction of the midgut and hindgut
Fluid of blood passes through walls of tubules
Nitrogenous wastes are precipitated as fluid passes toward hindgut
Waste emptied into hindgut and eliminated
Most water and salts reabsorbed by hindgut and returned to body
Nervous System fig 41.6b
Predominant double chain of ganglia runs along ventral surface
Anterior end possess three fused pairs of dorsal ganglia: the brain
Much control of activities regulated by ventral ganglia
Many activities continued with brain removed
Brain appears to be inhibitor, not stimulator as in vertebrates
SUBPHYLUM CHELICERATA: THE CHELICERATES
Class Arachnida: The Arachnids
Largest class of chelicerates
Possess a pair of chelicerae, pair of pedipalps, four pair of legs
Chelicerae: frontmost appendages, fangs with poison glands
Pedipalps: next set of appendages, like legs but one less segment
Have specialized functions: copulatory organs, sensory organs
Other general characteristics
Most are carnivorous, mites are herbivorous
Most ingest only preliquified foods, thus digestion is external
Are generally terrestrial, evolved direct transfer of sperm
Breathe by trachea, book lungs or both
Include 11 orders
Order Scorpiones: the scorpions fig 41.1;8
Pedipalps are modified into pincers
Use pincers to handle and tear food apart
Have venomous stingers on terminal segment
Distinctive jointed abdomens
Extremely ancient group of terrestrial arthropods
Respiration via book lungs
Males deposit spermatophores, picked up by females
Order Araneae: the spiders fig 41.9
Hunt prey or catch it in webs fig 3.14d
Silk formed from fluid protein, forced out spinnerets fig 41.10
Modified appendages
May be up to six pairs
Many forms are active hunters fig 41.9b
Have poison glands leading through chelicerae
Some are poisonous to man and large mammals
Examples: black widow and brown recluse fig 41.11
Reproduction
Males produce sperm web, add drop of sperm, pick up with pedipalps
May involve elaborate courtship
Male fits pedipalps into special plate on female's abdomen
Female may eat male once fertilization is complete
Eggs enclosed in silken egg sac
Young resemble adults, go through several molts
Order Acari: the mites fig 41.12
Most diverse in terms of numbers and species
Generally very small in size
Cephalothorax and abdomen fused into an ovoid body
Respiration occurs through trachea or directly through exoskeleton
Development occurs on many complex successive stages
Various juvenile stages have become reproductive
Called paedomorphosis
Many live on humans, some transmit diseases fig 41.13
Ticks are blood-feeding ectoparasites, transmit various diseases fig 41.12c
Cause extensive plant damage
Some are valuable biological controls
Order Opiliones: the daddy longlegs fig 41.14
Possess compact, oval bodies with extremely long, slender legs
Respire by a single pair of trachea
Engage in direct copulation, unusual among arachnids
Males possess penis
Females use ovipositor to deposit eggs
Most are predators, some are scavengers or feed on plant juices
Class Merostomata: The Horseshoe Crabs fig 41.15
Example: Limulus, common on North Atlantic coasts
Evolution
Ancient group, fossils identical to 220 million years old Limulus
May be derived from trilobites
Reproduction
Live in deep water, migrate to shallow coastal waters to mate fig 41.16
External fertilization, larvae resemble trilobites
General biology
Feed at night on mollusks and annelids
Swim on backs by moving abdominal plates
Possess five pairs of walking legs
Protective shell ends in tail spine, the telson
Breathe via five pairs of book gills
Class Pycnogonida: The Sea Spiders fig 41.17
Common, but rarely observed because of small size
Adults are generally parasites or predators on other animals
General biology
Have sucking proboscis with terminal mouth
Body consists mostly of cephalothorax, no well-defined head
Possess four to six pairs of legs
Males exhibit parental care of young, carry eggs on legs
Lack excretory and respiratory systems, exchange by diffusion
Not closely related to other two classes
SUBPHYLUM CRUSTACEA: CRUSTACEANS
Arrangement and Nature of Appendages
Two pairs of antennae, three pairs of chewing appendages
Number of legs varies with the species
All are biramous
Excluding first pair of antennae
Single-branched appendages previously biramous, one branch lost in evolution
Evolution of crustaceans
All descended from common ancestor as evidenced by nauplius larvae fig 41.4
Some groups lack larvae and undergo direct development into adult
General Biology
Have legs on abdomen and thorax like millipedes and centipedes (unlike insects)
Only arthropods with two pair of antennae
Mandibles evolved from limbs that developed a chewing function
Many have compound eyes and tactile hairs over whole body
Have feathery gills near base of legs
Excretion of nitrogen wastes occurs mostly across surface of cuticle
Osmotic composition of blood regulated by labyrinth or green gland
Diversity of Crustaceans
Decapods ("ten-footed") include lobsters, shrimp and crabs fig 41.18
Exoskeleton reinforced with calcium carbonate
Body segments fused into cephalothorax, covered by carapace
Crushing pincers common, used to obtain food
Abdominal swimmerettes used in reproduction and locomotion fig 41.19
Snapping of telson and uropods causes forceful, rapid movements
Crabs have larger broader carapace than lobsters fig 41.18c
Shrimps have smaller carapace than crabs or lobsters fig 41.18b
Terrestrial crustaceans
Pillbugs and sowbugs, terrestrial isopods, order Isopoda fig 41.20a
Sand and beach fleas, order Amphipoda
Planktonic crustaceans
Copepods, order Copepoda fig 41.20b
Water fleas, order Cladocera fig 41.21
Ostracods, order Ostracoda
Fairy shrimp and brine shrimp, order Anostracoda
Barnacles, order Cirripedia fig 41.22,24.11
Are sessile as adults, but have free-swimming larvae
Head attached to submerged object, food swept into mouth by feathery legs
Protected by calcareous plates attached to substrate
Are hermaphroditic which is unusual for crustaceans
SUBPHYLUM UNIRAMIA
General Characteristics
Evolved from annelids similar to oligochaetes, related to Onychophora
Respire via trachea
Filter waste products through Malpighian tubules
Classes Diplopoda and Chilopoda: The Millipedes and Centipedes fig 41.23
Both possess head region followed by numerous segments
Share similar reproductive strategies
Fertilization is internal, direct transfer of sperm
Sexes separate, all species lay eggs
General appearance of young is similar to adult
Centipedes
Have one pair of legs per segment
Are carnivorous, eat mainly insects
Appendages of first trunk segment modified into poison fangs
Millipedes
Have two pairs of legs per segment
Each segment derived from two fused segments
Most are herbivorous
Can roll bodies into a flat coil
May secrete defensive fluids and cyanide gas
Class Insecta: The Insects
Largest group of organisms on earth
Especially numerous in the tropics
Enormous diversity fig 41.24,25
External features fig 41.6
Primarily terrestrial organisms, small in size
Have three body segments: head, thorax, abdomen
Have three pairs of legs, all attached to thorax
Have one pair of antennae
May have one or two pairs of wings
Most possess compound eyes, many have ocelli
Elaborate mouthparts, widely variable fig 41.26
Characterized by unsegmented mandibles
Segmented maxillae comprise secondary pair of mouth parts
Labium forms the lower lip
Labrum forms the upper lip
Chewing insects have a tonguelike hypopharynx
Orders classified by structure of mouthparts, feeding habits
Chewing or mandibulate mouthparts fig 41.26
Coleoptera = beetles
Hymenoptera = bees, wasps and ants
Isoptera = termites
Orthoptera = grasshoppers and crickets
Elongate, stylet-like mouthparts
Diptera = horseflies, blackflies, mosquitos have fused stylets fig 41.27a
Advanced flies have piercing or lobe-like labium fig 41.27c
Lepidoptera = moths, butterflies have coiled proboscis
Thorax consists of three fused segments (tagmata)
Each has a pair of legs
Legs may be absent in some larvae
Example: bees fig 34.9
Example: flies fig 41.28,30
Structure of insect wings
If two pairs, attach to middle and posterior segments
If one pair, attach to middle segment
Arise as saclike outgrowths, are solid excluding veins
Are not homologous to other appendages
Two pairs are the basic construction for winged insects fig 41.25a
One pair lost in the evolution of groups like flies fig 41.25b
Most wings folded at rest, except for outstretched dragonfly wings
Forewings may be hard and tough, form covering for hindwings
Example: beetles fig 41.25d
Example: grasshoppers and crickets fig 41.6,24c
May possess detachable scales, like butterflies and moths fig 41.29
Some groups like springtails never evolved wings
Other insects are derived from winged ancestors
Fleas fig 41.25e
Lice fig 41.25f
Internal organization fig 41.6
Tubular, somewhat coiled digestive tract
Greater coiling associated with sucking mouthparts
Dilute digestive enzymes less effective on liquids than solids
Anterior and posterior digestive regions lined with cuticle
Digestion occurs within stomach or midgut
Excretion through Malpighian tubules
Trachea extend throughout body, may form air sacs fig 41.7
Spiracles are permanently closed in some aquatic, parasitic forms
Fat body is food-storage organ or is similar to vertebrate liver
Sense receptors
Possess wide variety of sensors in addition to eyes
Sensory hairs located all over bodies
Sense of taste located on mouthparts
Sense of smell located on antennae
Sound detected by tympanum, associated with tracheal air sacs fig 41.6a
Sensory hairs may also detect sound waves
Insect communication
Produce sounds which are mostly inaudible to humans
Produce chemicals called pheromones
Life histories
Most insects hatch from eggs outside of the mother`s body
Young insects undergo regular ecdysis, stages called instars
Simple metamorphosis fig 41.30
Wings develop during juvenile stages
Immature stages generally called nymphs
Complete metamorphosis fig 41.30
Wings appear only during resting stage just prior to final molt
Resting stage called a pupa or chrysalis fig 41.31
Pupa does not normally move, except mosquitos
Juveniles and adults live in distinct habitats
Development is indirect, larvae are wormlike
Larva do not have compound eyes
Larvae may or may not have legs fig 41.28,30,31
Generally have chewing mouthparts
Pupa generally are usually inactive and do not feed
Juvenile hormone controls ecdysis and molting via ecdysone fig 41.32
DEUTEROSTOMES
Embryological Feature Shared by Four Phyla
Echinodermata, Chordata and two smaller groups
Four phyla share common ancestry
Characteristics
Blastopore becomes anus, mouth develops at other end
Have radial cleavage
Daughter cells are identical for a brief period of time
Produce whole individual if separated
Individuals are identical in genetic makeup
Whole groups of cells move during embryonic development
Coelom produced by evagination of archenteron
Archenteron becomes gut cavity
PHYLUM ECHINODERMATA: THE ECHINODERMS
General Ecology of Echinoderms
Ancient group of marine animals, well-represented in fossil record
Name means "spiny skin" fig 41.33
Examples: sea stars, brittle stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers
Basic Features of Echinoderms
Have epidermis stretched over an internal skeleton
Endoskeleton composed of ossicles: movable or fixed calcium plates
Plates enclosed within living tissue when first formed
Bear spines as indicated by phylum`s name
Have perforations through which tube feet extend
Have a five-part body plan
Adults have no head or brain
Nervous system composed of circular nerve ring and its branches
Capable of complex response patterns, but lack centralized functions
Possess a water vascular system
Five radial canals extend from a ring canal around the esophagus
Radial canals determine basic five-part symmetry fig 41.34a
Water enters through madreporite, a sievelike plate
Flows to ring canal through the tubular stone canal
Radial canals extend out into hollow tube feet fig 41.34b
Some echinoderms have suckers at end of tube feet, others do not
Each tube foot has a muscular fluid-filled ampulla at its base
Feeding strategies of echinoderms
Sea cucumbers: tube feet around mouth are modified for feeding fig 41.33b
Sea lilies: tube feet arise from branched arms, filter food
Brittle stars: tube feet pointed and specialized for feeding fig 41.33d
Development of the coelom
Large coelom interconnected with complicated system of tubes
Helps provide for circulation and respiration
Respiration and waste removal occur through skin gills
Digestive system is simple but complete: mouth, gut and anus
Capable of extensive regeneration
Some animals may drop parts when attacked
May reproduce asexually by splitting into parts
Sexual reproduction and fertilization is external
Sexes are separate, but difficult to distinguish externally
Develop into free-swimming, bilaterally symmetrical larvae fig 41.35
Significantly different from annelid/mollusk trochophore larvae
Larvae possess bands of cilia, used for locomotion
Diversity of Echinoderms
Class Crinoidea: the sea lilies and feather stars fig 41.33c,36
Mouth and anus located on upper surface in an open disk
Simple excretory and reproductive systems
Extensive water vascular system
Large numbers of highly branched arms located around central disk
Filter feeders, food collected by mucus from tube feet on pinnules
Sea lilies are attached to a substrate by a stalk
Feather stars detach from stalks early in development, attach to substrate by claw-like structures
Sexes separate, external fertilization
Females may brood young
Crinoids resemble early fossil echinoderms
Class Asteroidea: the sea stars
Most familiar echinoderms, the "starfish" fig 41.33a,34
Active, important marine predators
Arms prominent and set off from the disk, generally five in number
Mouth located in center of the lower surface
Often feed on bivalve mollusks fig 41.37
Sexes separate, external fertilization
Females may brood young
Class Ophiuroidea: the brittle stars fig 41.33d
Slender arms more sharply set off from central disk than sea stars
Move by active movement of their arms along the substrate
Capture suspended particles with tube feet, long spines or arms
Arms detach readily, helping protect animals from predators
Class Echinoidea: the sea urchins and sand dollars fig 41.33e,f
Lack distinct arms, but retain familiar five-part body plan
Five rows of tube feet protrude through plates of the skeleton
Skeletons are made up of fused calcareous plates
Walk along substrate with tube feet or movement of spines
Feed on algae, debris scraped off the surfaces by triangular teeth
Reproduction similar to other echinoderms
Larvae have long arms, unlike those of other classes
Class Holothuroidea: the sea cucumbers fig 41.33b
Soft, sluglike organisms with tough, leathery outer skin
Most lie on sides at the bottom of the ocean
Mouth is located on one end
Surrounded by tube feet modified into tentacles
Tentacles secrete mucus to trap food particles
Calcareous skeleton reduced to widely separated, microscopic plates
Have highly branched respiratory trees that originate from cloaca
Water brought into and out of cloaca by muscular contractions
Gas exchange occurs across the respiratory trees
Have tube feet on body, may be restricted to five grooves
Move by tube feet or wriggling of the entire body
Some forms are hermaphroditic, unusual for echinoderms
|