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  2. Pedipalp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedipalp

    Pedipalps contain sensitive chemical detectors and function as taste and smell organs, supplementing those on the legs. [2] In sexually-mature male spiders, the final segment of the pedipalp, the tarsus, develops a complicated structure (sometimes called the palpal bulb or palpal organ) that is used to transfer sperm to the female seminal ...

  3. Spider anatomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_anatomy

    Most external appendages on the spider are attached to the cephalothorax, including the eyes, chelicerae and other mouthparts, pedipalps and legs. Like other arachnids, spiders are unable to chew their food, so they have a mouth part shaped like a short drinking straw that they use to suck up the liquefied insides of their prey.

  4. Chelicerata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelicerata

    Chelicerae and pedipalps are the two pairs of appendages closest to the mouth; they vary widely in form and function and the consistent difference between them is their position in the embryo and corresponding neurons: chelicerae are deutocerebral and arise from somite 1, ahead of the mouth, while pedipalps are tritocerebral and arise from ...

  5. Chelicerae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelicerae

    The jumping spider Phidippus audax.The basal parts of the chelicerae are the two iridescent green mouthparts. The chelicerae (/ k ə ˈ l ɪ s ər iː /) are the mouthparts of the subphylum Chelicerata, an arthropod group that includes arachnids, horseshoe crabs, and sea spiders.

  6. Glossary of spider terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_spider_terms

    Pedipalp (plural pedipalps or pedipalpi; also called just palp): The second appendage of the cephalothorax in front of the first leg; bears the palpal bulb in male spiders; [10] see segments, see also Pedipalp

  7. This Animal is Older Than Morse Code and Still Going Strong

    www.aol.com/animal-older-morse-code-still...

    What Does Jonathan Eat? The tortoises on St. Helena Island are free to graze on grass each day. They are also given supplemental fruit and vegetables and get their water from a trough in the lawn.

  8. Arachnid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arachnid

    Arachnids produce digestive enzymes in their stomachs, and use their pedipalps and chelicerae to pour them over their dead prey. The digestive juices rapidly turn the prey into a broth of nutrients, which the arachnid sucks into a pre-buccal cavity located immediately in front of the mouth.

  9. Tarantula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarantula

    Then they insert their pedipalps into the semen, absorb the semen into the pedipalps, and later insert the pedipalps (one at a time) into the reproductive organ of the female, which is located in her abdomen. The terminal segments of the pedipalps of male tarantulas are moderately larger in circumference than those of a female tarantula.