enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Antenna (zoology) - Wikipedia

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

    Some claim insects evolved from prehistoric crustaceans, and they have secondary antennae like crustaceans, but not primary antennae. Antennae are the primary olfactory sensors of insects [7] and are accordingly well-equipped with a wide variety of sensilla (singular: sensillum). Paired, mobile, and segmented, they are located between the eyes ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. Insect morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_morphology

    The general shape of the antennae is also quite variable, but the first segment (the one attached to the head) is always called the scape, and the second segment is called the pedicel. The remaining antennal segments or flagellomeres are called the flagellum. [17]: 8–11 General insect antenna types are shown below:

  5. Ionocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionocyte

    An ionocyte (formerly called a chloride cell) is a mitochondrion-rich cell within ionoregulatory organs of animals, such as teleost fish gill, insect Malpighian tubules, crustacean gills, antennal glands and maxillary glands, and copepod Crusalis organs. [1]

  6. Arthropod mouthparts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropod_mouthparts

    These, like the maxillipeds of crustaceans, are modified legs and not true mouthparts. [2] The forcipules arise from the first body segment, curving forward and to the midline. The tip is a pointed fang, which has an opening from a venom gland. The forcipules are used to capture and envenomate prey.

  7. Ostracod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostracod

    Unlike many other crustaceans, the body is not clearly divided into segments. Most species have completely or partly lost their trunk segmentation, and there are no boundaries between the thorax and abdomen, and it has therefore been impossible to tell if the first pair of limbs after the maxillae belongs to the head or the thorax.

  8. Triops longicaudatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triops_longicaudatus

    Triops longicaudatus is a member of the crustacean class Branchiopoda, which primarily contains freshwater animals with gills on their legs. The class Branchiopoda is divided into the subclasses Sarsostraca, containing fairy shrimp, and Phyllopoda, containing all other members (cladocerans, clam shrimps, and the tadpole shrimp).

  9. Cyclops (copepod) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclops_(copepod)

    The long first antennae, two in number, are used by the males for gripping the females during mating. Afterwards, the female carries the eggs in two small sacs on her body. The larvae, or nauplii , are free-swimming and unsegmented.