Table of contents | |
Introduction | |
Characteristics of Arthropoda | |
Classification of Arthropoda | |
Type of Mouthparts in Insects | |
Uses of Arthropoda | |
Characteristics of Mollusca | |
Classification of Mollusca |
Arthropoda is the largest phylum with about nine lakh species. They may be aquatic, terrestrial or even parasitic. They have jointed appendages and a chitinous exoskeleton.
This phylum includes several large classes and contains the class Insecta which itself represents a major portion of the animal species in the world. They possess the ability to survive in every habitat.
Advancement Over Annelida
Class 1. Crustacea
Class 2. Chilopoda
Class 3. Diplopoda
Class 4. Insecta (Hexapoda) [Largest number of species]
– Body is divisible into head, thorax and abdomen.
– There is a pair of antennae, and a pair of compound eyes.
– The thorax consists of three segments with three pairs of legs and usually two pairs of wings. Mesothorax has thick and leathery false wings called as tegmina and membranous metathoracic wings.
– The abdomen may consist of ten segments.
– Respiration usually takes places by tracheae. (No respiratory pigments).
– Heart is tubular and divided into chambers
– Malpighian tubules are the excretory organs. Uric acid is chief excretory waste.
– Sexes are separate.
– Development may be direct or indirect e.g. silverfish, cockroach, bedbug, locust, termites, butter flies, rat flea, beetle , wasp, aphid, glow worm etc.
– Maggot is the larva of Housefly
Insects communicate with each other by ectohormone called as Pheromones. Pheromones are chemicals secreted to the outside of the body and perceived (as by smell by other individuals of same species). They help in communication amongst the organisms of same species.
Ex.
The insects may be divided into four groups on the basis of their mode of development:
– Insects without Metamorphosis (Ametabolous Development). Certain insects, such as silver fish, do not undergo metamorphosis. These insects are most primitive and wingless.
There are three stages present in the life history; egg, young and imago (adult)
– Insects with gradual Metamorphosis (Paurometabolous Development). In this type of metamaophosis, the life history includes egg, nymph (young) and imago (adult). The nymph resembles the adult in its mode of life but differs in structure, the young being without wings. Gradual metamorphosis. Occurs in cockroaches, grasshoppers, locusts, termites, stick insects, praying mantis, bed bug and lice.
– Insects with incomplete Metamorphosis (Hemimetabolous Development). In this type of metamorphosis the life history includes egg, naiad (young) and imago (adult). The naiad differs from the adult in both mode of life and structure. Incomplete metamorphosis occurs in dragon flies and may flies.
– Insects Complete Metamorphosis (Holometabolous Development). In this type of metamorphosis the life history includes egg, larva, pupa and imago (adult). Complete metamorphosis occurs in butterflies, moth, beetles, house flies, mosquitoes, fleas, honey bees, ants, wasps. The larvae of butterflies and moths is called caterpillar. The larva of houseflies is known as maggot. The larva of beetles is termed grub and the larva of mosquito is called wriggler. The young one formed after every moulting is called as instar. The period between two molting is stadium.
– Hypermetabolous. Each larval stage differs from the others in habits, food and mode of living e.g. Blisterbeetle
Class 5. Arachnida
– The body is usually divisible into cephalothorax and abdomen.
– The cphalothorax bears simple eyes and six pairs of appendages (One pair of chelicerae, one pair pedipalpi and four pairs of legs)
– Antennae are absent.
– Respiratory organs are book lungs or trachea or both
– Excretion takes place by Malpighian tubules or coxal glands or both
– Development is generally direct.
Examples : Scorpion, spider, Tick, Mite, Aranaeus (garden spinder), Palamneus (Scorpion), Buthus (Scorpion)
– Spiders spins the web by means of a secretion of abdominal glands.
– There are two more classes in the phylum Arthropods. These classes are Onychophora and Merostomata.
Peripatus is an important examples of the class Onychophora, which has characters of Phylum Annelida and Arthopoda. Hence it is called "connecting link" between annelida and arthropoda . It breathes by trachea.
– *Limulus. (the king crab or horseshoe crab) is good example of class Merostomata which respires with book gills. The king crab are called "living fossils". A living fossil is a living animal of ancient origin
with many primitive characters.
– Larvae of different Arthropods
(a) Bombyx (Silkworm) - Caterpillar / Silkworm
(b) Beetles, honey bee - Grub
(c) Musca (Housefly) - Maggot
(d) Culex, Anopheles - Wriggler
(e) Pennaeus (Marine prawn) - Mysis, nauplius, protozoea
(f) Cancer (Crab) - Megalopa metanauplius, zoea
– Arthopoda is the biggest phylum. About 9,00, 000 species are there . Largest class is insect.
– Von Siebold established phylum Arthoropoda.
– Arthopods are Aquatic (Fresh water/marine), Terrestrial, burrower, parasitic.
– Generally mouth parts of an insect are one labrum, one labium, one hypopharynx, two mandibles and two maxillae. Following type of mouth parts are found is insects.
– Biting and chewing type e.g., Grass-hooppers, cockroaches and crickets.
– Piercing and sucking type.e.g. mosquitoes, bed-bugs
– Chewing and lapping type. Lap means to drink by scooping with tongue and lapper is that which laps liquid e.g. honey bees.
– Sponging type. eg. Housefly (Musca domestica.) It lacks mandibles. Feeds on sugar by dissolving in saliva and sucking.
– Siphoning type e.g. Butterflies and moth. Here the proboscises formed by the modification of maxilla.
Lac Insect
– Lac is produced commercially by an insect Tachardia lacca (Laccifer lacca).
– Lac is actually secreted for its protection and not for the food of the insect.
– Male insects are winged and structurally complete, but females are degenerated.
– Lac or shellac is an exuviate (secretion) of mainly female.
Lac is resinous substance
Cochineal Bug
– Dactylopis cocccus lives upon cactus. Dead and dried bodies are used for making a dye called cochineal dye.
Blister Beetle
– Lytta is a genus of blister beetle. The drug cantheridine is prepared from its blood.
– Cantheridine is widely used for healthy growth of hair
Red Ants
– Red ants are used for the production of formic acid.
Glow worm
Wingless female and larva of certain beetles like Lymphyris notiluca which emits greenish light. Also yields luciferin
Honey Bee : A hive consists of a vertical sheet of wax with a number of hexagonal cells for rearing young bees (brood cells), storing food (storage cells), royal chamber and chamber of themselves.
Bee is a social, polymorphic and colonial insect. It has three main castes – queen, drones and workers.
Queen is the only fertile female of the colony which continues to lay eggs for 2–5 years.
Drones are male honey bees. They develop from unfertilized eggs. Drones and virgin queens take part in nuptial flight. After copulation the drones are not allowed to come back into hive.
Workers are sterile females.
Scout bees search for food and intimate the same to worker bees by dances-round dance for less than 75m and tail wagging dance for longer distances.
Prof. karl von Frisch got Nobel prize 1973 for decoding the language of bee dances. Workers have pollen collecting apparatus, honey storing mechanism and wax secreting glands.
Young workers secrete royal jelly. Royal jelly is given to queen or potential queens.
Honey contain simple sugars (fructose and levulose), Vitamins and minerals. It is a tonic, laxative and sweetening agent. True product of honey bee is bees wax.
Animals belonging to the phylum Mollusca have soft-bodies, triploblastic and bilaterally symmetrical and coelomate. The study of Mollusca is called Malacology. They are sluggish invertebrates, with a thin fleshy envelope or mantle covering the visceral organs.
– It is the second largest Phylum.
– Mollusca (Soft bodied) are marine or freshwater or terrestrial.
Johnston coined the name Mollusca.
– Study of this phylum is known as Malacology & study of shells of molluscan is known as Conchology.
– Body is unsegmented with a variety of shapes. Neopilina is exceptionally segmented. (connecting link).
– Molluscas are usually bilateral. Few are secondarily asymmetrical (snail) due to twisting (Torsion) during growth.
– Triploblastic with Organ system level.
– Body wall includes one layered epidermis (usually cilited) with unstripped muscles found in bundles.
Body parts consist of:
(i) Head with sense organ. Head is absent in Pelecypoda & Scaphopoda.
(ii) Dorsal visceral mass containing organ system.
(iii) Ventral foot for locomotion.
(iv) Thin fleshy fold or outgrowth of dorsal body wall covers the body. This fold is called mantle or pallium. It encloses a space mantle or pallial cavity between itself and the body. The mantle usually secretes an external limy shell. Shell is made up of Calcium carbonate and Concheolin protein.
Shell may also be internal (Cuttle fish), reduced and even absent (Octopus).
Mollusca
– Coelom is greatly reduced. It is represented by cavities in the pericardium, kidneys and gonads. Space among the viscera contain blood and form haemocoel.
– Digestive tract is complete. Buccal cavity contain a rasping organ the Radula, with transverse row of teeth.
– Anus opens into the mantle cavity.
– Digestive glands are known as hepatopancreas.
– Respiration is usually by gills i.e., Ctenidia. But respiration may takes place by body surface also.
Dentalium respire by Mantle.
– Pila respire by pulmonary sac on land and by gills in water.
– The circulatory system is open. It includes dorsal pulsatile heart and a few arteries that open into sinuses.
– Cephalopoda has closed type of circulatory system
– Blood has a copper containing, blue respiratory pigment Haemocyanin. Blood is colourless with amoebocytes.
– Excretory system includes 1 or 2 pairs of sac like kidneys, which open into the mantle cavity. Kidney of molluscans are Metanephridia known as Kaber's organs or Organ of Bojanus. Excretory matter is ammonia or uric acid.
Nervous system comprises three paired ganglia:
(1) Cerebral (above the mouth) (2) Pedal (In the foot) (3) Visceral (in visceral mass)
These are interconnected by
(1) Commissure (Joins similar ganglia)
(2) Connectives (Joins dissimilar ganglia)
Senses organ includes
(1) Eye - Present over a stalk called ommatophore (Gastropoda).
(2) Statocyst/Lithocyst - For equilibrium in foot
(3) Osphradia - Chemoreceptor/Olfactory as well as for testing chemical & physical nature of water.
– Sexes usually separate (snail has ovotestis). Gonads have ducts.
– Fertilization may be external or internal. – Cleavage is spiral, determinate, unequal and holoblastic.
– Development is - Direct or indirect.
– Trochophore is very common larva of Mollusca phylum.
– Larva - Glochidium (Fresh water mussel) and Veliger (Pila)
– Precious pearl of the size of tennis - ball is made by a mollusk - Tridekna
– ‘‘Nacre layer’’ is called ‘‘Mother of Pearl’’. This layer is made up of CaCO3 and choncheolin protein.
– Father of pearl industry - Kokichi Mikimoto
Molluscs are classified on the basis of shell, Foot, Nervous system and Gills into seven classes.
1. Cephalopoda - Marine
Shell-Internal and reduced it may be external (Nautilus) or absent (Octopus)
Redula - Present
Foot - Modified into a funnel and partly into 8 or 10 sucker bearing arms that surround the mouth
Locomotion is by expelling water in jet through siphon (Jet propulsion). Ink glands in some squids for offense and defense. When the squid is attacked, it emits a cloud of inky fluid through its siphon. This 'smoke screen' interferes with the vision and chemoreceptor of the predator and thereby helps the squid to escape.
- Closed blood circulation.
- Hectocotyle for sperm transfer
- Larva absent
e.g. Sepia-Cuttle fish*
10 arms having Chromatophores.
Tethys - Sea-fly
Loligo - Squid
(Radula absent)
*Octopus - Devil fish 8 arms
Nautilus - Tiger shell
2. Pelecypoda Bivalvia or Lamellibranchiata
- Marine/fresh water
Head-Absent
Shell-Consist of two valves Movably hinged dorsally.
Redula-Absent Foot-Plough or Wedge shaped for burrowing
Redula-absent
Larva-Glochidium Trochophore
Unio-Mussel (fresh water)
Mytilus-Mussel (marine)
Lamellidens-mussel
Ostrea
Teredo-Ship worm.
Pinctada-Pearl oysters.
Pteria- Indian pearl oyster.
Tridekna-Highest economic value
Pecten - Scallop
3. Gastropoda
- Marine/fresh water/moist soil. largest class.
- embryo grows into an asymmetrical adult due to twisting/torsion of visceral mass during development. mouth & anus lie on same side.
Head-With eyes & tentacles.Shell - Spirally coiled
Radula – Present
Foot - Large & flat
Larva - Trochophore or Veliger.
e.g.- Pila-Apple-snail (Shell used in but-tons)
Cypraea-Old currency
Limex-Slug (shell-less)
Helix
Turbinella-Shankh
Doris-Sea lemon
Aplysia- Sea hare*
Planorbis-Land snail
Lymnea-Land snail
4. Scaphopoda
- Marine
Head - absent. Shell-Tubular, open at both end.
Redula-Present
Foot - Conical and use for digging
Larva - Trochophore
e.g.
Dentalium-Tusk shell. (Respire by mantle)
5. Polyplacophora/ Amphineura - Marine
Head - reduced without eyes and tentacles.
Shell - Present or absent. 8 dorsal plates present. (Multivalved)
Radula – Present
Foot - Reduced/absent.
Larva-Trochophore
e.g.
Chiton-The coat of mail shell (Sea-mica)
Chaetopleura-*
6. Aplacophora
- Marine, Worm-like
Head-Small without eyes & tentacles
Shell - Absent.
Redula - Present
Foot-Reduce/absent.
Larva-Trochophore
e.g.
- Neomenia
7. Monoplacophora - Marine, common character of Annelida and Arthropoda.
Head - Indistinct
Shell - Dome-shaped with mantle.
Radula - Present
Foot - Flat muscular
Larva - Trochophore
e.g.- Neopilina
Living fossils Connecting link of Annelida and Mollusca and only segmented mollusk with nephridia.
1. What are the characteristics of Arthropoda? |
2. How are Arthropoda classified? |
3. What are the types of mouthparts in insects? |
4. What are the uses of Arthropoda? |
5. What are the characteristics of Mollusca? |
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