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| Insect Identification Guide |
| Some Other Arthropods |
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Insects and other ArthropodsAn arthropod is an invertebrate animal (one that has no backbone but instead is held together by an external skeleton known as an exoskeleton). An arthropod has a segmented body with jointed appendages (commonly referred to as legs, although limbs might be more appropriate, as some of these serve as antennae, claws etc). The exoskeleton of most arthropods is made up largely of chitin and proteins. The name arthropod comes from two Greek words, arthron, meaning joint, and podos, meaning foot - so implying 'jointed feet'. Members of the phylum Arthropoda are classified into systematic groups based on common characteristics, so not surprisingly centipedes (with many 'legs' but not actually 100, but in particular one pair per body segment), millipedes (with many more legs, but again not actually 1000, atached as two pairs per body segment) and arachnids (spiders and scorpions) with eight legs do not belong to the same class as insects, which have six legs. Crabs, shrimps and lobsters (and the many other crustaceans), whose exoskeletons are greatly strengthened with calcium carbonate, are also arthropods.
Although scorpions are arthropods they are definitely not
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