Major arthropod groups

major groups

Trilobites:

Defining characteristics?

Text: Anterior-posterior burrows divide the body into 3 regions (two lateral, one central).

http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/_0_0/success_02

http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/glossary/glossary_popup.php?word=trilobite

 

 

Ecology and lifestyles

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/arthropoda/trilobita/trilobitalh.html

http://www.palaeocast.com/episode-18-trilobites/

http://www.cornellcollege.edu/geology/courses/greenstein/paleo/trilobites.pdf

In most species, each of the bases of the limbs possess jagged toothlike structures that are thought to have processed food passed between the legs forward to the mouth. Such food-processing limb bases are referred to as gnathobases (gnathos = jaw).

They breathed by gills. Between the crawling limbs and the body where pairs of finely branched feathery structures or gills.

gillstrilobite gill

We know less about most internal features except digestion.

Trilobites were a very successful group and a diverse group even in the Cambrian. They can represent as much as 75% of the fossils from a Cambrian site. http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/_0/success_03

So how long did trilobites exist? Longer than the dinosaurs. They disappeared at the end of the Permian, http://park.org/Canada/Museum/extinction/permass.html, and (more info) http://www.cornellcollege.edu/geology/courses/greenstein/paleo/trilobites.pdf but some scientists argue that they on their way out since the Devonian.

lineagess

Their connection to other arthropods still debated but we now feel they are most related to Arachnids. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/arthropoda/trilobita/trilobitasy.html

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/arthropoda/chelicerata/cheliceramorpha.html

 

http://www.trilobites.info/triloclass.htm#arachnomorpha

Following a period in which diverse but enigmatic and well scattered group of organisms appear, a great variety and abundance of animal fossils appear in deposits dating from a geologically brief interval between about 530 to 520 Ma, early in the Cambrian period. During this time, nearly all the major living animal groups (phyla) that have skeletons first appeared as fossils. We now also have a number of those localities, that because of the unique circumstances of fossilization have yielded preserve details of complex organs such as eyes, digestive tracts, and appendages. In addition, the unique method of preservation (rapid mudslides) also allowed the preservation of soft bodied animals and essentially the entire community, allowing us a glimpse at life within a marine ecosystem at this time.

Link to tutorial on Cambrian

 

Merostomata

Text:

Appendages on the abdomen (opisthosoma) are flattened and modified for gas exchange as "book gills".

Terminal portion of body (telson) drawn out into an elongated spike.

Link to tutorial on Merostomata

 

Pycnogonidae

Sea spiders (Pycnogonida)

Text:

Body tagmata lacking.

Unique proboscis at the anterior end.

Variable numbers of walking legs.

The earliest fossils are known from the Cambrian.

Sea spiders are carnivorous, some feeding on other invertebrates by sucking out the juices, while others tear their prey apart and pass it into a proboscis for feeding. The digestive system extends into the legs, and the pair of simple eyes are positioned near the end of the trunk .

 

 

Most sea spiders are 1 to 10 mms in length but some deepwater species in Antarctica can have a leg span up to 90 cms!

 

sea spider

Pycnogonids have extremely reduced bodies in which the abdomen has almost disappeared, while the legs are long and clawed. The head has a long proboscis with an unusual terminal mouth and several simple eyes on a central tubercle. The pharynx not only acts as a pump, but also macerates the food by means of bristles projecting into the lumen from the plates. Because of the lack of space in the tiny body, parts of some organ systems, such as the digestive and reproductive systems, are housed in the legs.   Diverticula (digestive ceca) from the gut extend far into legs and the female legs are expanded to provide room for the developing ova

 

The head also bears a pair of claws and a pair of ovigers on which the eggs are carried. Pycnogonids are one of the few groups of animals in which the males exclusively care for the developing eggs The larva either remains on the ovigerous legs of the male or more frequently becomes an ectoparasite or endoparasite on hydroids or corals. In either case the larva is followed by a four-legged and then a six-legged form each with a further pair of posterior buds. When the adult form is reached some appendages may be lost.

leg sea spiderwith eggs