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Arthropods III and IV

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Lecture notes on arthropods (part of Bilaterians, Molluscs, and Arthropods)

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  • September 19, 2023
  • 3
  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
  • Neil gosling
  • Arthropods
  • Unknown
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Arthropods III

Hexapods - 6 thoracic legs

They have 3 pairs of legs. All insects are hexapods but not all hexapods are insects.
3 tagmata (abdomen, thorax, head)
Most adults have 2 pairs f wings
1 pair of antenna
Compound eyes
Tracheal system for respiration

Sub phylum hexapods aren't quite insects. There are 2 roups within hexapods: insects and
entognatha.
Entognatha have retracted mouthparts, many are blind, wingless. (example is springtails)

Hexapod respiration
 Respire through trachea
 Branched airways
 Allowe insects to colonise land
 Body movement forces CO2 out
 Has spiracles

Respiration through trachea limits body size because oxygen transport is less efficient as the body
size increases. 300mya the atmosphere level of O2 was 35% so dragonflies were a lot bigger.

Insects are ecologically important
 Recycle nutrients, break down dead material
 Plant pollinators and seed dispersal
 Maintain plant community composition through grazing
 Food for animals
 Animal parasites

Insects have a variable diet.
 They’ve evolved to fit many niches
 Efficient digestion relies on efficient excretion
 Efficient digestion must minimise water loss
 Efficient digestion may involve endosymbionts
Phloem feeders - too much water and sugar so they have malpgian tubules that remove water and
sugars
Desert insects don't get enough water so the malphigian tubules are tightly bound to rectum to
extract as much water as possible.

Evolution of flight
 Origin of flight (allows insects to find new niches to adapt to) theory that wings came from
gills (locomotion and swimming) also another theory that wings evolved from lobes on
thorax

Direct flight muscles (dragonflies and cockroaches) - directly attached to wings
Indirect flight muscles (most other insects) - muscles attached to thorax and the wings are pivoted.

Hexapods during development

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