The eyes of ghost crabs allow 360? vision because they are positioned on mobile stalks.
“Another arthropod method of achieving all-round vision is to have eyes on mobile stalks, like the ghost crab.” (Foy and Oxford Scientific Films 1982:124)
Many resources that living systems require for survival and reproduction constantly change in quantity, quality, and location. The same is true of the threats that face living systems. As a result, living systems have strategies to maintain access to shifting resources and to avoid changing threats by adjusting their location or orientation. Some living systems modify their position by moving from one location to another. For those that can’t change location, such as trees, they modify position by shifting in place. An example of an organism that does both is the chameleon. This creature can move from place to place to find food or escape predators. But it also can stay in one place and rotate its eyes to provide a 360-degree view so that it can hunt without frightening its prey.
Living systems constantly receive signals from their environment that help them survive. Light (in the visible spectrum) can come from other living systems (such as fireflies) or from non-living sources (such as the sun). Survival often depends on sensing and responding to challenges like low light conditions or light that has been altered in some way. Because basic survival is at stake, living systems must excel at meeting those challenges. A well-known phenomenon is how water bends light. A stork trying to catch a fish underwater can compensate for this bending effect so that when it strikes at the fish, it has a good chance of catching it.
Subphylum Crustacea (“crust”): Crabs, barnacles, shrimp, pillbugs
Some crustaceans, like pillpugs and woodlice, live on land, but most are found in the ocean. Their heads are distinctive among the arthropods: they have two pairs of antennae and three pairs of feeding appendages that help them hold and crunch food. Crustaceans also have a unique larval stage called the nauplius (named after the son of Poseidon) which has three pairs of legs and one eye. Most crustaceans are in class Malacostraca, which contains a wide range of species that live in mostly marine environments, like krill, lobster, and mantis shrimp.
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