Digestive System
Mantis shrimp are very quick and deadly predators, which prey on crustaceans such as clams, fish, or other small invertebrates. They can either pierce or smash their prey with their fierce appendages. They can pierce the soft shell of a fish, or smash and break open the shell of a clam to retrieve the soft tissue.
The digestive tract of malacostracans consists of a mouth; an esophagus; a two-chambered foregut; a midgut with outpocketings called digestive glands, or hepatopancreas; and a hindgut, or rectum. The large anterior foregut, or cardiac stomach, occupies much of the posterior aspect of the head and the anterior thoracic body cavity. A constriction separates it from the smaller, more ventral, pyloric stomach that lies in the posterior part of the thorax. Lining the inside of the greatly folded and muscular stomach walls, especially the pyloric portion, are groups or rows of stiff bristles, teeth, and filtering setae known as the gastric mill. The mill is strongly and complexly developed in large decapods, which ingest food quickly and in coarse chunks. The filtering setae are prominent in malacostracans that ingest fine materials or masticate their food thoroughly with the mouthparts. The macerated and partly digested food slowly works its way through the filtering system of the pyloric stomach into the ceca, or pouches, of the hepatopancreas. There enzyme production and the storage and absorption of food takes place. The digestive secretions depend on the species and diet and include cellulase and chitinase. In stomatopods the cardiac stomach is large enough to hold the remains of large prey; it opens directly from the mouth without an intervening esophagus. The midgut, or main intestine, may either extend throughout the abdomen, as in lobsters, or be very short, as in crabs. Fecal material is voided through the anus from the short rectum.
Malacostracans excrete waste fluids mainly through the ducts of the nephridial glands, which are present in the body segments of the second antennae and the maxillae. The ducts open on the basal segments of those head appendages. Antennal nephridial glands are present in the adult stages of eucaridans, mysidaceans, and amphipods and in the larval stages of stomatopods and hemicarideans. The antennal glands of amphipods are enlarged in freshwater forms but are small in terrestrial species. Maxillary nephridial glands are typical of adult stomatopods, syncaridans, hemicaridans, and isopods. Adult leptostracans have both types of glands. Nephrocytes are present at the bases of thoracic legs and elsewhere in the body of mainly primitive groups. Bathynellaceans have a unique uropodal gland. The sternal gills of amphipods are osmoregulators.
The digestive tract of malacostracans consists of a mouth; an esophagus; a two-chambered foregut; a midgut with outpocketings called digestive glands, or hepatopancreas; and a hindgut, or rectum. The large anterior foregut, or cardiac stomach, occupies much of the posterior aspect of the head and the anterior thoracic body cavity. A constriction separates it from the smaller, more ventral, pyloric stomach that lies in the posterior part of the thorax. Lining the inside of the greatly folded and muscular stomach walls, especially the pyloric portion, are groups or rows of stiff bristles, teeth, and filtering setae known as the gastric mill. The mill is strongly and complexly developed in large decapods, which ingest food quickly and in coarse chunks. The filtering setae are prominent in malacostracans that ingest fine materials or masticate their food thoroughly with the mouthparts. The macerated and partly digested food slowly works its way through the filtering system of the pyloric stomach into the ceca, or pouches, of the hepatopancreas. There enzyme production and the storage and absorption of food takes place. The digestive secretions depend on the species and diet and include cellulase and chitinase. In stomatopods the cardiac stomach is large enough to hold the remains of large prey; it opens directly from the mouth without an intervening esophagus. The midgut, or main intestine, may either extend throughout the abdomen, as in lobsters, or be very short, as in crabs. Fecal material is voided through the anus from the short rectum.
Malacostracans excrete waste fluids mainly through the ducts of the nephridial glands, which are present in the body segments of the second antennae and the maxillae. The ducts open on the basal segments of those head appendages. Antennal nephridial glands are present in the adult stages of eucaridans, mysidaceans, and amphipods and in the larval stages of stomatopods and hemicarideans. The antennal glands of amphipods are enlarged in freshwater forms but are small in terrestrial species. Maxillary nephridial glands are typical of adult stomatopods, syncaridans, hemicaridans, and isopods. Adult leptostracans have both types of glands. Nephrocytes are present at the bases of thoracic legs and elsewhere in the body of mainly primitive groups. Bathynellaceans have a unique uropodal gland. The sternal gills of amphipods are osmoregulators.