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Nomenclature & legends
To make them easier to understand, all diagrams will have the same color coding, helping with identifying which body parts are the same across chelicerates’ diversity.

MAIN BODY
Euchelicerates : Prosoma-opisthosoma-telson
Pycnogonids: cephalosome-thorax-abdomen (+telson for some fossils)

The genital opening/external organs will be indicated in pink, and the breathing system will be in white.

APPENDAGES
The first arthropods had double legs called “biramous legs”, with 2 branches attached to a single coxa (trilobites are a good example of this condition). The endopodite, the more inward one, was used for walking, while the exopodite, the more outward one, served mostly for respiration. Most chelicerates conserved only one of them, more often to walk, and heavily modified the breathing ones.

Chelicera, Birmous legs made of endopodite (walking) & endopodite both attached to a coxa, and other significant appendages are in purple.

Leg’s segments name abreviations
Cx: Coxae
Tr: Trochanter
Fe: Femur
Pa: Patella
Ti: Tibia
Mt: Metatarsus
Ta: Tarsus
Pr: Propod

Nomenclature & legends To make them easier to understand, all diagrams will have the same color coding, helping with identifying which body parts are the same across chelicerates’ diversity. MAIN BODY Euchelicerates : Prosoma-opisthosoma-telson Pycnogonids: cephalosome-thorax-abdomen (+telson for some fossils) The genital opening/external organs will be indicated in pink, and the breathing system will be in white. APPENDAGES The first arthropods had double legs called “biramous legs”, with 2 branches attached to a single coxa (trilobites are a good example of this condition). The endopodite, the more inward one, was used for walking, while the exopodite, the more outward one, served mostly for respiration. Most chelicerates conserved only one of them, more often to walk, and heavily modified the breathing ones. Chelicera, Birmous legs made of endopodite (walking) & endopodite both attached to a coxa, and other significant appendages are in purple. Leg’s segments name abreviations Cx: Coxae Tr: Trochanter Fe: Femur Pa: Patella Ti: Tibia Mt: Metatarsus Ta: Tarsus Pr: Propod

Chelicerata

No one knows for sure what the ancestral chelicerate looked like, the group as a whole being really rare before many of its main lineages became well established in the fossil record (and already too different from one another). The diagram here is an attempt to summarize the common traits of all chelicerates on a theoretical profile reminiscing of a cambrian habellian-like arthropod.

Front appendages are chelicerae, claws (or later fangs) made of 4 or more segments at the beginning (now reduced to 3 or 2 in all current chelicerates)

Accute senses with a well- developed nervous system, eyes and numerous setae (=hairs) sensing vibrations

No clear distinction at first of anterior & posterior tagma. At least the first 4 segments (acron+3 first legs-bearing segments) were already fused together, & generally the front of the body is more dedicated to walking & handling food, while the body end is often non-walking.

The exact number of body segments is unknown, most chelicerates (except pycnogonids) having ancestraly around at least 15 segments post-chelicerae.

The mouth opening is located between the chelicerae & the first pair of legs

Gnathobase (serrated extension of the pedipalp’ coxae to process food, lost in pycnogonids & terrestrial forms)

Ancestral forms have biramous legs with a walking endopodite & a breathing exopodite. Endopodites become more and more reduced past the front part of the animal, and quasi all living chelicerates have lost the biramous state for uniramous legs.

Segmented body covered by an unmineralized exoskeleton made of chitine, growing through molting.

Body ending with an accessory telson, located after the anal opening.

Chelicerata No one knows for sure what the ancestral chelicerate looked like, the group as a whole being really rare before many of its main lineages became well established in the fossil record (and already too different from one another). The diagram here is an attempt to summarize the common traits of all chelicerates on a theoretical profile reminiscing of a cambrian habellian-like arthropod. Front appendages are chelicerae, claws (or later fangs) made of 4 or more segments at the beginning (now reduced to 3 or 2 in all current chelicerates) Accute senses with a well- developed nervous system, eyes and numerous setae (=hairs) sensing vibrations No clear distinction at first of anterior & posterior tagma. At least the first 4 segments (acron+3 first legs-bearing segments) were already fused together, & generally the front of the body is more dedicated to walking & handling food, while the body end is often non-walking. The exact number of body segments is unknown, most chelicerates (except pycnogonids) having ancestraly around at least 15 segments post-chelicerae. The mouth opening is located between the chelicerae & the first pair of legs Gnathobase (serrated extension of the pedipalp’ coxae to process food, lost in pycnogonids & terrestrial forms) Ancestral forms have biramous legs with a walking endopodite & a breathing exopodite. Endopodites become more and more reduced past the front part of the animal, and quasi all living chelicerates have lost the biramous state for uniramous legs. Segmented body covered by an unmineralized exoskeleton made of chitine, growing through molting. Body ending with an accessory telson, located after the anal opening.

Pycnogonida (sea spiders)
Group represented: Pantopods, family Nymphonidae

Body in 3 tagma: cephalosome, thorax & abdomen

Mouth proned forward in a proboscis

1° walking legs on the cephalosome

4 eyes on an ocular tubercle

Legs host part of the digestive tract and their large surface serve for breathing

Thorax bearing 2°, 3° & 4° pairs of walking legs

Small abdomen, almost non-existent to absent in modern species

Long, 9-segmented legs with tripled coxae, attached to the main body by a lateral process

Gonopores (reproductive openings) on the 2° legs

3° appendages used only for handling eggs, called ovigers

2° appendages used for manipulation, called palps

Notes: Paleozoic pycnogonids are extremely diverse morphologically, often exhibiting a more developed abdomen & more primitive appendages structure. Larvae morphology is also typical and is called “protonymphon”

Pycnogonida (sea spiders) Group represented: Pantopods, family Nymphonidae Body in 3 tagma: cephalosome, thorax & abdomen Mouth proned forward in a proboscis 1° walking legs on the cephalosome 4 eyes on an ocular tubercle Legs host part of the digestive tract and their large surface serve for breathing Thorax bearing 2°, 3° & 4° pairs of walking legs Small abdomen, almost non-existent to absent in modern species Long, 9-segmented legs with tripled coxae, attached to the main body by a lateral process Gonopores (reproductive openings) on the 2° legs 3° appendages used only for handling eggs, called ovigers 2° appendages used for manipulation, called palps Notes: Paleozoic pycnogonids are extremely diverse morphologically, often exhibiting a more developed abdomen & more primitive appendages structure. Larvae morphology is also typical and is called “protonymphon”

Euchelicerata

3-segmented chelicerae

Primitively 2 simple median eyes (ocelli) & 2 lateral compound eyes

Often show a raised median part on the prosoma called cardiac lobe, corresponding to vascular & nervous system clustering

Body divided into a prosoma & an opisthosoma, often called respectively “cephalothorax” & “abdomen” in popular science

13-segmented opisthosoma, mostly dedicated to hosting non-locomotory & non-sensitive systems. Most derived groups only show 12 segments or less, the first segment being often reduced or squished into the prosoma in modern groups.

Pointy telson

Exopodite modified into a booked structure to grant more surface for gas exchanges for respiration, similar to simpler horseshoe crab’s book gills

All extant euchelicerates have their genital opening placed on their 2° opisthosomal segment, which was in third position before being reduced or squished into the prosoma in modern groups

First opisthosomal segment with a pair of walking legs, reduced to non-functional appendages or just absent in most euchelicerates

Prosoma bearing chelicerae & 5 pairs of walking legs. Endopodites reduced (if not absent in most cases, most euchelicerates having uniramous prosomal legs)

Mouth placed more at the center of the prosoma

Note: This diagram doesn’t represent a specific group but illustrates the template from which horseshoe crabs, eurypterids, chasmataspidids & arachnids evolved. The overall shape is inspired by species of synziphosurines.

Euchelicerata 3-segmented chelicerae Primitively 2 simple median eyes (ocelli) & 2 lateral compound eyes Often show a raised median part on the prosoma called cardiac lobe, corresponding to vascular & nervous system clustering Body divided into a prosoma & an opisthosoma, often called respectively “cephalothorax” & “abdomen” in popular science 13-segmented opisthosoma, mostly dedicated to hosting non-locomotory & non-sensitive systems. Most derived groups only show 12 segments or less, the first segment being often reduced or squished into the prosoma in modern groups. Pointy telson Exopodite modified into a booked structure to grant more surface for gas exchanges for respiration, similar to simpler horseshoe crab’s book gills All extant euchelicerates have their genital opening placed on their 2° opisthosomal segment, which was in third position before being reduced or squished into the prosoma in modern groups First opisthosomal segment with a pair of walking legs, reduced to non-functional appendages or just absent in most euchelicerates Prosoma bearing chelicerae & 5 pairs of walking legs. Endopodites reduced (if not absent in most cases, most euchelicerates having uniramous prosomal legs) Mouth placed more at the center of the prosoma Note: This diagram doesn’t represent a specific group but illustrates the template from which horseshoe crabs, eurypterids, chasmataspidids & arachnids evolved. The overall shape is inspired by species of synziphosurines.

Some info about drawings' legends, and here we go, we begin with chelicerata, pycnogonida & euchelicerata

#Cheliceratime #chelicerata #pycnogonida #seaspider #anatomy
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Invicta Sea Spider Sport Watch Yellow Gold 50mm 80138 Seller: colorful.watches.japan (100.0% positive feedback) Location: JP Condition: New with box and papers Price: 668.44 USD Shipping cost: 89.93 USD Buy It Now

Ad: For Sale - Invicta Sea Spider Sport Watch Yellow Gold 50mm 80138 #InvictaWatch #SeaSpider #SportWatch

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This species is one of the several extinct pycnogonids/sea spiders from the Jurassic of Western Europe. It’s also the only fossil one to be assigned to a current genus due to the striking similarities with modern species. The golem part in its name refers to the ancient and mineral nature of the holotype compared to other Eurycyde’s species.

Size : a bit more than 0,5cm of main body length, around 2,5/3cm of legspan
Time period : Late Jurassic
Paleoart speculativometer : Few missing parts

The animal drawn look like a red spider-figure without abdomen, with really long legs

This species is one of the several extinct pycnogonids/sea spiders from the Jurassic of Western Europe. It’s also the only fossil one to be assigned to a current genus due to the striking similarities with modern species. The golem part in its name refers to the ancient and mineral nature of the holotype compared to other Eurycyde’s species. Size : a bit more than 0,5cm of main body length, around 2,5/3cm of legspan Time period : Late Jurassic Paleoart speculativometer : Few missing parts The animal drawn look like a red spider-figure without abdomen, with really long legs

What time is it ? It’s #Cheliceratime!
This time, we’re taking a swim in the jurassic seas of Germany to meet a sea spider named Eurycyde golem!

All the basic infos are here but if you want to learn more there’s more below!⬇️

#seaspider #jurassic #solnhofen #pycnogonid #sciart #bugsky #invert

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SA Creature Spotlight - Ammothella biunguiculata

This long-limbed sea spider has a long spherical proboscis and equally long chelifores. It is plain brownish in color, with a short abdomen.

www.samarineguide.com.au/taxon/908/

#greatsouthernreef #seaspider #southaustralia #underwaterphotography

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Sketch in clip of a sea spider riding a jelly and two anemones plus a sea pig.

Sketch in clip of a sea spider riding a jelly and two anemones plus a sea pig.

A painting of a sea spider riding a jellyfish in Rebelle.

A painting of a sea spider riding a jellyfish in Rebelle.

Abyssal plane shenanigans :) #ocean #seaSpider #jellyfish #sciArt

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Preview
Sea Spider Shock: Missing Gene, Vanishing Body, Evolution’s Strangest Plot Twist In a scientific first, researchers have mapped the sea spider’s entire genome in high resolution, uncovering a fascinating link between its unusual body and a missing gene. Unlike its arachnid cousins,...

Sea Spider Shock: Missing Gene, Vanishing Body, Evolution’s Strangest Plot Twist #Science #Biology #EvolutionaryBiology #SeaSpider #Evolution #Genetics

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Strange Deep Sea Spiders Eat In a Way We've Never Seen Before
Strange Deep Sea Spiders Eat In a Way We've Never Seen Before YouTube video by Anton Petrov

Symbiotic relationships rather like #orchids, now a new #SeaSpider, not a spider, close to #methane seeps that eats #bacteria they 'farm' on their own skin that consume the methane

Fascinating ..

youtu.be/crW5fg87PZ0?...

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Preview
Methane-powered sea spiders: Diverse, epibiotic methanotrophs serve as a source of nutrition for deep-sea methane seep Sericosura | PNAS Methane seeps harbor uncharacterized animal–microbe symbioses with unique nutritional strategies. Three undescribed sea spider species (family Ammo...

New species of #seaspider (pycnogonid) that lives near methane seeps, and eats the #chemosynthetic bacteria that grow on its body

www.pnas.org/doi/full/10....

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Striding Sea Spider
Striding Sea Spider YouTube video by Neptune Canada

I did the Soundwork on this Video of a Sea Spider
#seaspider #neptunecanada

youtu.be/SV4SYSsnMug?...

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Rockpooling along the South West Coast : Sea spider - the Gangly lancer
Rockpooling along the South West Coast : Sea spider - the Gangly lancer YouTube video by Sylvia Meller

Meet the weirdest, most alien looking creature you can find in a rockpool: The Gangly lancer , a type of sea spider
#UKWildlife, #UKNature, #Tidepool, #Rockpool , #MarineLife, #SeaSpider
youtu.be/iId8-vUFmZw

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Amazing find at gore point nr Porlock over the weekend.
#UKcoast #SomersetWildLife #UkWildlife #rockpooling #seaspider #nature #SpringWatch #BBCSpringWatch #ExmoorCoast #Porlock

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Diving down deep in the ocean for these guys! Get your fins on some Deep Sea Cool Guys patterned bags and blankets on Monday!

#fossilholler #deepsea #appalachianartist #westvirginiaartist #coelacanth #oarfish #gulpereel #pelicaneel #anglerfish #fanfinanglerfish #seaspider

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Day 22 - February 12, 2025

#crab #seaside #hardshell #seaspider #♋️

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It's so hard to get a perfect focus doing #macrophotography without a tripod... I tried Topaz photo AI on some #macro pics and I must say I'm impressed with its sharpening capabilities.

Here is a #seaspider before/after. So happy with the golden eyes!

#bioart #sciart #pycnogonid #closeup

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Video

and
#pycnogonid #seaspider

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Illustration of a yellow-kneed sea spider handdrawn and coloured with watercolour pencils, casting a shadow drawn in grey pencil.

Illustration of a yellow-kneed sea spider handdrawn and coloured with watercolour pencils, casting a shadow drawn in grey pencil.

Even in the depths of the ocean, spiders whisper to make everyone’s stories be heard all around the world. For example, they’re telling each other about the hardcover and audiobook editions of BE THE SEA!
www.kickstarter.com/projects/att...
🕷
#bethesea #seacreatureoftheday #seaspider #spider #books

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