A centipede would have 50 pairs of legs, adding to 100 legs. Cent is the French word for 100 (one hundred), and would therefore mean it would have 100 legs
Centipedes do not always have 100 legs. They can have anywhere between 20 to 300 legs despite rumours of them having 100
Centipedes have one pair of legs per body segment. This differentiates them from millepedes, which have two pairs of legs per body segment.
1 pair of pedipalp so just two pedipalps
Chelicerata is a subphylum of the phylum Arthropoda. It contains organisms like spiders, ticks, and scorpions. Organisms in Subphylum Chelicerata have a cephalothorax and a posterior abdomen. They have six pairs of appendages on their cephalothorax: Chelicerae, pedipalps, and four walking legs. Chelicerae are pinchers that crush food, and pedipalps are appendages that control food. They do not have mandibles, which are jaws, and they don't have antennae, so organisms in Subphylum Chelicerata technically aren't insects.
A spider has two body segments A spider has two body segments
The prey is captured by the pedipalps and the sting is inserted in it, the paralyzed or killed prey is sucked using the chelicerae.
No, spiders are solitary animals. They do not travel in groups, pairs, or families. They do not seek out humans for revenge, nor does the scent of a dead spider attract other spiders. These are just myths.
Lice are insects and therefore have 3 pairs of legs for a total of 6 legs all together. Lice are in the insect order Phthiraptera.
Scorpions have larger pedipalps becasue they do!
Spiders are not insects and do not have antennae like insects. Outside of their fangs they have pedipalps which serve a similar function.
NO. Pedipalps are adapted for handling food and for sensing.In male spiders, pedipalps are further modified to carry sperm during reproduction.
pedipalps
8 cuz it is a spider and sriders have 8 legs
None, Arachnids don't have antennae, insects do.
Spiders do not have antennae.
Masculines (adults) have the last segment of the pedipalps bigger (compared to adult feminines of the same species, or subspecies) and flat, transformed in copulatory structures, while feminine ones doesn't.
None. They use their pedipalps for sensory.
Yes. Spiders have eight legs and two more, shorter, limbs at the very fronts of their bodies that are called "pedipalps." They are used the way we use our arms. However, male spiders use their pedipalps to impregnate their mates. The male pedipalp functions like a biological syringe. The male makes a little doily-like web on the ground, discharges semen onto that felt-like silken fabric, and then inserts the tips of its pedipalps into the drop of semen. The semen is sucked into the pedipalps, and later on the male spider inserts each pedipalp into the genital opening of the female spider and the semen is forced out of his pedipalps and into her reproductive system. Therefore, the pedipalps of male spiders are very different from those of female spiders. Male pedipalps have to be much bigger than those of female spiders. So if you see a spider with two pedipalps that are terminated by big roundish things, then that spider will be a male. In many species of spider the males are very much smaller than the females. All they have to do is to deliver a couple of small droplets of semen to the female. They don't have to produce hundreds of eggs, guard the eggs, guard the babies for a while after they have hatched, etc. So there is no particular biological reason for male spiders to be big. In fact, if they are small enough it may be very difficult for the female to catch them before or after intercourse, and since they are so small it may not even be worth the effort to catch them to eat them. So maybe that is the reason that in lots of spider species the males are much smaller than the females. In many spiders that have good vision because they are hunting spiders (e.g., lynx spiders, fishing spiders, wolf spiders, and jumping spiders), the males may look different from the females. Looking special helps ensure that the female will realize that this other spider is a male and not a female coming to try to kill her, and that this spider is a male of the female's own species. The male's special appearance is also involved in the elaborate dance that many species of hunting spiders use to identify themselves by species and then to "entrance" the female spider so that she will put aside thoughts of eating him and let him mate with her.
Two pedipalps (which function more or less like arms) and behind them Eight legs And some spinnerets (that give silk sort of the way a cow's teats give milk) Spiders also have chelicerae, which are two short things that are tipped with fangs. Spiders do not have antennae.
A garden Spider Has 8 Legs