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  2. Hexapoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexapoda

    The subphylum Hexapoda (from Greek for 'six legs') or hexapods comprises the largest clade of arthropods and includes most of the extant arthropod species. It includes the crown group class Insecta (true insects), as well as the much smaller clade Entognatha, which includes three classes of wingless arthropods that were once considered insects: Collembola (springtails), Protura (coneheads) and ...

  3. Remipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remipedia

    Remipedia is a class of blind crustaceans, closely related to hexapods, found in coastal aquifers which contain saline groundwater, with populations identified in almost every ocean basin so far explored, including in Australia, the Caribbean Sea, and the Atlantic Ocean.

  4. Hexapodidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexapodidae

    Hexapodidae is a family of crabs, the only family in the superfamily Hexapodoidea. [1] It has traditionally been treated as a subfamily of the family Goneplacidae, [2] and was originally described as a subfamily of Pinnotheridae.

  5. Allotriocarida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allotriocarida

    Allotriocarida is a clade of Pancrustacea, containing Hexapoda (all insects, springtails & their close relatives). It also contains three non-hexapod classes: Remipedia (blind, venomous crustaceans), Cephalocarida (translucent aquatic detrivores), and Branchiopoda (freshwater, non-decapod 'shrimp').

  6. List of animals by number of legs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animals_by_number...

    The following is a list of selected animals in order of increasing number of legs, from 0 legs to 653 pairs of legs, the maximum recorded in the animal kingdom. [1] Each entry provides the relevant taxa up to the rank of phylum.

  7. Entognatha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entognatha

    The Entognatha are a class of wingless and ametabolous arthropods, which, together with the insects, makes up the subphylum Hexapoda. [1] [2] Their mouthparts are entognathous, meaning that they are retracted within the head, unlike the insects. [1] Entognatha are apterous, meaning that they lack wings.

  8. The Ocean Can Remember for 20 Years, Study Says - AOL

    www.aol.com/ocean-remember-20-years-study...

    This new “ocean memory framework” accounted for short-term local effects involving air-sea heat fluxes, as well as long-term impacts created by ocean circulation.

  9. Category:Hexapoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Hexapoda

    Articles related to the Hexapoda, the subphylum which comprises most species of arthropods and includes the insects as well as three much smaller groups of wingless arthropods: Collembola, Protura, and Diplura (all of these were once considered insects).