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  2. Antenna (zoology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_(biology)

    Antennae (sg.: antenna) (sometimes referred to as "feelers") are paired appendages used for sensing in arthropods. Antennae are connected to the first one or two segments of the arthropod head. They vary widely in form but are always made of one or more jointed segments.

  3. Pain in crustaceans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_in_crustaceans

    A European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) 2005 publication [82] stated that the largest of decapod crustaceans have complex behaviour, a pain system, considerable learning abilities and appear to have some degree of awareness. Based on this evidence, they placed all decapod crustaceans into the same category of research-animal protection as ...

  4. Coxal gland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coxal_gland

    The coxal gland is thought to be homologous with the antennal gland of crustaceans. The gland consists of an end sac (saccule), a long duct (labyrinth) and a terminal bladder (reservoir). [2] There is generally only one pair (two in some spiders), and they open on the coxae of the walking legs [1] or at the base of the second antennae in the ...

  5. Insect morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_morphology

    The tarsus of insects corresponds to the penultimate segment of a generalized arthropod limb, which is the segment called the propodite in Crustacea. In adult insects, it is commonly subdivided into two to five subsegments, or tarsomeres, but in the Protura, some Collembola, and most holometabolous insect larvae it preserves the primitive form ...

  6. Crustacean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crustacean

    A shed carapace of a lady crab, part of the hard exoskeleton Body structure of a typical crustacean – krill. The body of a crustacean is composed of segments, which are grouped into three regions: the cephalon or head, [5] the pereon or thorax, [6] and the pleon or abdomen. [7]

  7. Arthropod head problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropod_head_problem

    The classical view was that the chelicerae were homologous to the second antennae of crustaceans (i.e., they are innervated from the tritocerebrum), a view based partly on the fact that the chelicerae were innervated from the same ganglion that innervates the labrum, which is the tritocerebrum in crustaceans and insects.

  8. Diastylidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diastylidae

    The flagellum of the second antenna reaches past the pereon. [3] In females the second antenna is much smaller than the first antenna. In males the third maxilliped and the first four pereiopods almost always have exopods (outer branches). In females they may, in rare cases, be absent from all but the third maxillipeds, and the two first ...

  9. Spiny lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiny_lobster

    Spiny lobsters typically have a slightly compressed carapace, lacking any lateral ridges. Their antennae lack a scaphocerite, the flattened exopod of the antenna. This is fused to the epistome (a plate between the labrum and the basis of the antenna). The flagellum, at the top of the antenna, is stout, tapering, and very long.

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