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External Anatomy of a Crayfish

  • Page ID
    20953
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    Prelab Questions:

    1. Crayfish belong to the Kingdom __________________, the Phylum _________________________, and the subphylum __________________________.
    2. List three characteristics that all arthropods share.
    3. Name two other animals in the same phylum as a crayfish (related).

    The Head:

    Place the crayfish ventral side up so the mouthparts can be observed.

    1. Locate the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd maxillipeds. These appendages are used for manipulating food. (The 3rd maxilliped is the largest and topmost one, the 2nd is underneath, and the 1st is underneath the 2nd)
    2. Locate the mandible which lies underneath the maxillipeds. This structure should be hard and difficult to move. The mandible of arthropods opens differently than the jaws of humans. Describe the difference.
    3. Locate the two large antennae and the smaller antennules that branch from the base. The antennae are sense organs (touch, taste, equilibrium)
    4. Locate the eyes, which extend from two stalks called pedicles.

    The Body

    crayfish body.png

    1. The body of the crayfish consists of a fused head and thorax: the cephalothorax. The cephalothorax is covered by a thick armor called a carapace. Extending from the carapace is a pointy structure called the rostrum. Locate the cephalothorax and rostrum.
    2. The abdomen of the crayfish is segmented and flexible. Bend the abdomen back and forth and observe how each segment moves.
    3. Count the number of segments on the abdomen. Hint: bending it will show you were the segments are separated. How many segments are on your crayfish? ______ Compare this number to other crayfish, are they all the same? _________

    The Appendages

    1. Locate the chelipeds (the claws). Gently manipulate the cheliped to determine the direction in which the appendage can bend. How many joints are there on a single cheliped? _________
    2. Cut the end of the cheliped off and use the forceps to find the connective tissue inside. Pulling on this tissue will make the claw open and close. Try it!
    3. Behind the cheliped are four pairs of walking legs. How many joints are on each leg? _____
    4. Locate the swimmerets (appendages attached to each segment of the abdomen). Are the swimmerets jointed? ______ How many pairs of swimmerets are there? ______
    5. The last segment of the abdomen (the 7th segment) is called the telson, and it is specialized for swimming. Locate the two uropods extend from either side of the telson.

    Determining the Sex of Your Crayfish

    1. Look at the first pair of swimmerets on your crayfish. If these swimmerets are considerably larger and stiffer than the other swimmerets, you have a male. If the first swimmerets are about the same size as the others, your crayfish is a female. What is the sex of your crayfish? ____
    2. Measure the length of your crayfish and compare it to other crayfish in the room to complete the table.
    Female Crayfish (length in cm) Male Crayfish (length in cm)
    Average: Average:

    Based upon your data, which sex of crayfish is the largest? _______________

    Label the crayfish picture below.

    crayfish.png


    This page titled External Anatomy of a Crayfish is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Shannan Muskopf (Biology Corner) .

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