Poduromorpha

The order Poduromorpha is one of the three main groups of springtails (Collembola), tiny hexapods related to insects. This group was formerly treated as a superfamily Poduroidea.

Poduromorpha
Podura aquatica (Poduridae)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Entognatha (?)
Subclass: Collembola
Order: Poduromorpha
Superfamilies
  • Gulgastruroidea
  • Hypogastruroidea
  • Isotogastruroidea
  • Neanuroidea
  • Onychiuroidea
  • Poduroidea

They can be best distinguished from the other springtail groups by their body shape. The Symphypleona are very round animals, almost spherical and the abdomenal segments is not visible. [1] Both Entomobryomorpha and Poduromorpha are long springtails with six visible abdominal segments. While Entomobryomorpha have the first thorax segment reduced, Poduromorpha retain all three. [1] The Poduromorpha also tend to have short legs and a plump body, but more oval in shape than the Symphypleona. Their name means ‘foot tail’, deriving from their short, flat, furcula.

Systematics

The Poduromorpha were, as Poduroidea, united with the Entomobryomorpha (then called Entomobryoidea) in a group called "Arthropleona", but this has more recently turned out to be paraphyletic. Actually the Entomobryomorpha, the Poduromorpha, and the third springtail lineage the Symphypleona are equally distinct from each other. Their treatment at equal taxonomic rank reflects this. Their rank has also varied a bit. When the springtails were still believed to be an order of insects, the "Arthropleona" and the Symphypleona were treated as suborders.[2]

List of families

Includes fossil families.

Superfamily Neanuroidea

Red Poduromorph Springtails (family Neanuridae) crawling on damp garden soil.

Superfamily Poduroidea

Superfamily Hypogastruroidea

Superfamily Gulgastruroidea

Superfamily Onychiuroidea

Superfamily Isotogastruroidea

Footnotes

  1. Stephen P. Hopkin (2007). A Key to the Collembola (springtails) of Britain and Ireland. FSC. ISBN 978-1-85153-220-9.
  2. See references in Haaramo (2008).
gollark: People *do* write games in higher-level languages, even though maybe it would be better to not do that.
gollark: But it's a popular one.
gollark: It is not.
gollark: Well, that's one of them, yes.
gollark: I've got several games in Java, one which seems to actually be Electron, and I think some in C++.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.