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Arachnid, term for animals in the class including
the scorpions,
spiders,
daddy
longlegs, mites, and ticks.
Fossils suggest that arachnids were among the first animals to live on
land, perhaps in the early Devonian Period, nearly 400 million years ago.
About 60,000 species are known, although many, especially mites, remain
undiscovered or undescribed. Arachnids are found throughout the world in
nearly every habitat, but they reach their greatest size and diversity
in warm arid and tropical regions.
Characteristics
The arachnid body is divided into two parts: anterior
and posterior. The anterior part, called the cephalothorax, contains sense
organs, mouthparts, and limbs in pairs. The first pair of limbs-the chelicerae-may
form pincers or poison fangs, and the second pair-the pedipalps-may serve
as pincers, feelers, or legs. The other limb pairs, generally four, are
used for walking. The posterior part of the body, the abdomen, bears the
genital opening and other structures. It is usually equipped with modified
gills called book lungs. Most arachnids are solitary except at the time
of mating, when a variety of complex behavior patterns may be observed.
Females may guard eggs or young, which are often born live.
Behavior and Importance
Arachnids are usually predaceous. Often they hunt or
lie in wait for small animals such as insects. Food may be partly or wholly
broken down by secreted fluids and then sucked in. Arachnids have simple
eyes and various prey-subduing structures, such as the segmented, stinging
tail of scorpions and the abdominal spinnerets with which spiders construct
elaborate insect traps (orbs or webs). Mites constitute the largest and
most diverse order of arachnids, followed by the spiders. Some mites feed
on plants and a few species are serious agricultural pests. Some are predaceous,
often feeding on other species of mites. Parasitic lifestyles are common
among mites and many are of veterinary and medical importance. Ticks are
a distinct bloodsucking subgroup of mites specialized for parasitizing
reptiles, birds, and mammals. Ticks carry organisms that cause serious
human diseases.
The bites of some spiders and the stings of a few species
of scorpions are dangerously poisonous to humans (Black
Widow Spider, Brown Recluse Spider).
However, most arachnids are harmless and contribute to the balance of nature
by controlling the populations of the insects they prey on or the plants,
reptiles, birds, or mammals that serve as their hosts.
Scientific classification: Arachnids constitute
the class Arachnida, in the phylum Arthropoda. The class is divided into
11 orders: the Acari or Acarina (mites and ticks), Amblypygi (tailless
whipscorpions), Araneae (spiders), Opiliones (daddy longlegs), Palpigradi
(palpigrades), Pseudoscorpiones (false scorpions), Ricinulei (ricinuleids),
Schizomida (micro whipscorpions), Scorpionida (true scorpions), Solpugida
(windscorpions), and Uropygi (whipscorpions). |