AskDefine | Define cephalothorax

User Contributed Dictionary

English

Etymology

From the cephal, from the κεφαλο- (kephalo-), from κεφαλ (kephal, meaning head), from the root ghebh-el-; + thorax.

Pronunciation

  • (US) or

Noun

  1. The fused head and thorax of spiders and crustaceans.
    • 1874 CE: T. De Witt Talmage, Around the tea-table
      "Come in!" says the gray spider to the house-fly; "I have entertained a great many flies. I have plenty of room, fine meals and a gay life. [...] Philosophers have written volumes about my antennae and cephalothorax."

Translations

anatomy: fused head and thorax

Derived terms

Related terms

References

Anagrams

  • Top choral hex.
  • Thor, a chapel : ox.

Extensive Definition

The cephalothorax (called prosoma in some groups) is an anatomical term used in arachnids and malacostracan crustaceans for the first (anterior) major body section. The remainder of the body is the abdomen (opisthosoma), which may also bear lateral appendages as well as the tail, if present. The term "prosoma" can also be applied to the head of insects, but as the two are always exactly synonymous in insects (not true for mesosoma vs. thorax or metasoma vs. abdomen), the simpler term - "head" - is used instead.

Chelicerate cephalothorax

In the chelicerates, the cephalothorax does not originate from any fusion of head + thorax, because there is no post-cephalic tagmosis (no thorax) in their immediate ancestors. A more correct usage is to say that the cephalothorax (prosoma) in the Chelicerata is formed by the fusion of the head segments + some anteriormost trunk segments. Abdomen is too much a general term, indicated unrelated structures in a number of taxa. Recommended usage is prosoma versus opisthosoma. The dorsal sclerites of the cephalothorax are typically fused into a shield called carapace, while the ventral ones are much reduced and usually covered by the coxae of pedipalps and legs I-IV.

Crustacean cephalothorax

It is derived from the fusion of the head (from Greek cephale) and the trunk (from Greek thorax), and therefore includes all the mouthparts, antennae, and the thoracic appendages, such as the legs of a lobster. In the Malacostraca, the cephalothorax is typically covered by a protective carapace.
cephalothorax in German: Prosoma
cephalothorax in Spanish: Cefalotórax
cephalothorax in French: Céphalothorax
cephalothorax in Icelandic: Höfuðbolur
cephalothorax in Italian: Cefalotorace
cephalothorax in Japanese: 頭胸部
cephalothorax in Lithuanian: Galvakrūtinė
cephalothorax in Polish: Głowotułów
cephalothorax in Portuguese: Cefalotórax
cephalothorax in Russian: Головогрудь
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