Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The phylum Arthropoda is the largest phylum of the Animal Kingdom. At least three quarters of a million species have been recorded; this is more than three times the number of all other animals species combined. The tremendous adaptive diversity of arthropods has enabled them to survive in virtually every habitat they are perphas the most successful of all the invaders of the terrestrial environment. Arthropods have a wide range of feeding habits; they feed on solid food materials or juices, or on vertebrate blood. Many of them are freefreeliving and others live as pests and parasites on plants and other animals, or as predators. Most arthropods play an important role in the general economy of man, his crops, and his livestocks. The phylum includes familiar forms as spiders, mites, scorpions, shrimps, crabs, insects, centipedes and millipedes.
1. Arthropods are bilaterally symmetry (segmented), metameric and triploblastic animals reflecting their annelidan ancestry, but most species exhibit some degree of reduction in metamerism as a consequence of loss, fusion and differentiation of segments. 2. The body is divided into segments which are not all alike but differ in form and structure. They are also usually grouped into three main regions recognized as the head, thorax and abdomen. 3. They have paired jointed appendages which are specialized in many ways, thus adapted to perform various functions (walking, swimming, jumping).
4. The body is covered by a chitinous exoskeleton divided into plates and cylinders, permitting movement, and is periodically shed, permitting growth. 5. Muscles attached to the inside of the skeleton and the skeltomuscular system functions as a lever system. 6. All internal structures derived from invaginations of the body wall have a chitinous lining. The anterior and posterior parts of the gut, called the foregut and hindgut, possess such a lining. The midgut, derived from endoderm, is more restricted then in most animals. 7. The blood vascular system is open, and the dorsal heart is primitively tubular hemolymph. hemocoelamic body, organs bathed in
8. The nervous system is like that of annelids. The sense organs are highly developed and include simple or compound eyes, sensory setae, auditory organs and statocysts. 9. Complete digestive system with anterior appendages to from mouth parts. 10. 10. Excretion, aquatic through gills (ammonia) or green glands Malphigian tubules (uric acid). 11. 11. Terrestrial forms respire by a system of branching air tubes known as the tracheae, or by lung books (Arachnids). Aquatic forms respire by gills and through the body surface. 12. 12. Sexes are separate, and the young usually hatch from the eggs in an immature stage that undergoes a gradual change, called metamorphosis, to become adult.
Classification of Arthropoda:
The phylum includes many classes, orders, and the other categories. However, we will concern with the following:
Class: Crustacea
Penaeus (shrimp)
Portunus (crab)
Class: Myriapoda
Centipede (Chilopoda)
Scolopendra (centipede)
Millipede (Diplopoda)
Class: Arachnida
Class Arachnida Theridion (spider)
Class: Insecta
Melicodes (grasshopper)
Myriapoda
Two, Head and Trunk. Trunk. One pair of legs per each body segment. segment. Simple eyes, ocelli and 1 pairs of antennae. antennae. Trachea. Trachea. Malphigian tubules Terrestrial. Terrestrial. Scolopendra, Sympgyla. Sympgyla.
Arachnida
Two, Prosoma (Cephalothorax), Opithosoma (Mesosoma, Metasoma). Metasoma). 4 pairs of legs attached to cephalothorax region. region. No leg at opithosoma. opithosoma. Simple eyes, ocelli. Don't ocelli. have antennae. antennae. Aquatic forms: Gills. Land forms: Gills. forms: forms: Trachea, lung books. books. Malpighian tubules. tubules. Mostly terrestrial, Some aquatic. aquatic. Spider, Mites, Ticks. Ticks.
Insecta
Three, Head, Thorax, Abdomen. Abdomen. 3 pairs of legs attached to thorax. thorax. Compound eyes, 1 pair of antennae. antennae. Aquatic forms: forms: Gills. Gills. Land forms: Trachea. forms: Trachea. Malpighian tubules. tubules. Mostly terrestrial, Some aquatic Grasshopper, Butterflies. Butterflies.
Other species of Myriapoda prey smaller animals like earthworms, mollusks and insects. Thus, these animals of Myriapoda maintain the natural balance. Moreover, there are some species related to Centipedes and Millipedes attack crops causing considerable loss in yield. As for class Arachnida, its members have relative importance to man, animals and crops. For instance members of Araneida (Spiders) are mostly predators feeding on animals juices as they feed on sow bugs, scorpions, mites, insects and snails.
Larger spiders can feed on small amphibian, reptiles, birds and mammals. Thus, spiders play a role in natural balance, that they can be used in biological control to eliminate injurious pests. Members of order Scorpionida are also predators attack smaller animals like insects, spiders, centipedes and millipedes. The larger species can feed on mice and rats by killing the victims with poisons and then sucking the animal juices. Scorpions may attack man by stinging him, and then, the secreted poison may cause death. Mostly members of Pseudoscorpionida are soil inhabitants feed on decomposed material, but some of which are predators on smaller animals.
Order Acarina contain mites ticks which include several species bring important to agricultural production. Ticks are parasites on the domestic animals. Also, mites are parasite on domestic animals, man as well as the economic crops. Class Insecta includes members having economic importance for man and his livestocks as well as for crops production. Some insect species have medical importance to man and his domestic animals. Blood suckers may act as vectors to many pathogens. Many other insect species act as dangerous pests on economic crops. Due to the economic importance of mites and ticks, the following examples will be discussed in details.
Symptoms of T. urticae:
A wide spread pest has attacked several economic crops, including field crops, vegetables, ornamentals and fruit trees. Symptoms appear as yellowish pale spots on the lower surface of the infected leaves. Gradually, the spots change to dark yellowish then transfer to reddish and finally to brownish spots. In highly infected plants, the spots become larger and joining together to cover most or entire the lower leaf surface. The upper surface of the infected leaf has purple colour which then turns to dark brown. In advanced case, the leaves die and fall down; and fruits become scabby.
Life cycle:
The female deposits eggs singly around leaf veins specially on the lower surface, as well as on buds. When the egg hatches, a larva with three pairs of legs emerges and starts to feed on leaf tissues juice. Then, the larva becomes quite before molting to a protonymph which has four pairs of legs, and starts to feed for a while after which it becomes quite and molts to deutonymph. It then feeds, becomes quite and molts to mature female or male. Mating occurs and females deposit eggs to repeat the life cycle. The life cycle lasts 8 days in summer and 40 day in winter. A number of 27 generations per a year is found under the Egyptian circumstances. One female can lay a number of 100 eggs during its life span.
and resemble beans or nuts. Also, several nymphal stages exist in of ticks, while in hard ticks, there is only one nymphal stage. Soft ticks are quick feeders as they attached to the host for several days and feed only once . After feeding the adult female lays a large mass of eggs and dies. Adult soft ticks, on the other hand, lay eggs after each blood meal.
Cleanliness of poultry houses. Spraying of floors and walls with chemicals may eliminate ticks for a long time. Dusting with chlorinated hydrocarbons or other chemicals is effective. Spraying poultry houses, roosts, and litter with special chemical.
34-
blood and then dropping to the ground again. After a while they shed their skin and emerge as eight-legged but sexaully immature ticks known as nymphs. The nymphs are distinguishable from females by absence of the genital aperture. They climb upon bushes or weeds waiting for a host, unless they stay starved in the absence of the host. They get their meals from the host, and drop to the ground to digest the meal, transform, and molt to sexual mature adults then, they climb up to host for mating, copulating, and the males usually die shortly after copulation. The females get down. Laying a large mass of eggs and die.
Cleanliness of the domestic animal's pens. Spraying houses, barns and/or dipping infested animals in pens with special acaricides. Elimination of weeds and grasses, or using chemical control by dusting or spraying the pastures or grasses.
cephalothorax
abdomen
T. Urticae
Mating Eggs
Adult
+
L.C. 8 days in summer, 40 days in winter. 27 generations.
Soft Tick
In batches Mating 2-3 weeks (developing)
Eggs
Fall Spring
Larvae
(6 legs)
Adult +
Molt
Feed
A. persicus
Nymph
Rest, Molt
Hard Tick
+ Big meal Climb to the host for Mating Adult Feed, + Molt Eggs (in soil) Large mass Larvae (6 legs)
H. aegyptiaca
Digest
Soft ticks
Related to Fam. Argasidae Body covered by a leathery cuticle marked by tubercles or granulations, no plates or shields. Mouth parts located in a ventral position Have several nymphal stages Quick feeders; nymphs and adults feed frequently. Adult lays eggs after each blood meal.
Hard ticks
Related to Fam. Ixodidae Body has a dorsal shield or scutum which completely covers the back in males, but only the anterior portion of females. Mouth parts located in an anterior position.
Morphological variations
Biological variations
Have one numphal stage. Slow feeders; long-feeding ticks; adults feed only once.
/.
2011/2012