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Crustacean

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Crustaceans
Hyalella azteca thumbnail

Larger Hyalella azteca image

Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Subphylum:Crustacea
Classes

Remipedia
Cephalocarida
Branchiopoda
Ostracoda - ostracods
Mystacocarida
Copepoda - copepods
Branchiura
Cirripedia - barnacles
Tantulocarida
Malacostraca - lobsters, crabs, krill, etc.

The crustaceans (Crustacea) are a large group of arthropods (55,000 species), usually treated as a subphylum. They include various familiar animals, such as lobsters, crabs, shrimp and barnacles. They are variously found in marine and freshwater, with a few terrestrial members (such as woodlice).

Structure of Crustaceans

Crustaceans have 3 distinct body parts, head, thorax, and abdomen. They have two pairs of antennaes on the head with compound eyes. Also with three pairs of mouthpairs and a telson. Smaller crustaceans respire through body surface by diffusion and larger crustaceans respire by gills.Crustaceans typically have a thick carapace on dorsal part covering part of their body. Their appendages are typically biramous, including a second pair of antennae (but not the first).

There are 1,220 barnacle species, 1,000 branchiopods, 13,000 copepods, and 30,000 malacostraca. All barnacles are marine and spend their adult lives attached to rocks. Barnacles are described standing on their head feet. They are filter feeding organisms and filter feed by circulating water through its head feet.

The classification varies somewhat. The groups listed at right are generally recognized, but several of them are often treated as subclasses of a class Maxillopoda. Evolutionary relationships between the different groups are not entirely clear, making the exact definition of larger groups difficult.

Reproduction

Most crustaceans have separate sexes and are distinguished by apendages on the abdomen called swimmerets. The first and sometimes the second pair of swimmerets are larger comparatively to the female. Terrestial crabs mate seasonal and return to the sea to breed. Female crabs eggs are still retained by the females until hatch. When the eggs hatch, they hatch into free-swimming larvae.