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The decapod (crustaceans, such as a crab, lobster, shrimp or prawn) is made up of 20 body segments grouped into two main body parts: the cephalothorax and the pleon . [1] [2] Each segment may possess one pair of appendages, although in various groups these may be reduced or missing. They are, from head to tail:
In front of the pereiopods are three pairs of maxillipeds that function as feeding appendages. The head has five pairs of appendages, including mouthparts, antennae, and antennules. There are five more pairs of appendages on the abdomen. They are called pleopods. There is one final pair called uropods, which, with the telson, form the tail fan. [2]
The pair attached to the first segment of the head are called primary antennae or antennules. This pair is generally uniramous, but is biramous in crabs and lobsters and remipedes. The pair attached to the second segment are called secondary antennae or simply antennae.
This has resulted in development in decapod crustaceans being generally abbreviated. [1] There are at most nine larval stages in decapods, as in krill, and both decapod nauplii and krill nauplii often lack mouthparts and survive on nutrients supplied in the egg yolk (lecithotrophy). In species with normal development, eggs are roughly 1% of the ...
The head contained the brain and carried sensory and feeding appendages. The trunk bore the appendages responsible for locomotion and respiration (gills in aquatic species). In almost all modern arthropods, the trunk is further divided into a "thorax" and an "abdomen", with the thorax bearing the main locomotory appendages.
The first appendage pairs are elongated chelicerae, with the other five being biramous appendages. The exopods of these appendages bear setae on their tips, hence the name Setapedites. The opisthosoma is divided into a pre-abdomen and an abdomen. Each pre-abdomen segment has both a pair of appendages and on the tergites, leaf-shaped ...
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Scarabaeus hercules (now Dynastes hercules) was the first species in Linnaeus' class "Insecta". Linnaeus divided the class Insecta into seven orders, based chiefly on the form of the wings. He also provided a key to the orders: [2] 4 wings; pairs dissimilar; forewings fully hardened: Coleoptera; forewings partly hardened: Hemiptera; pairs similar