Many
terrestrial arthropods have evolved a closed
respiratory system composed of
spiracles, tracheae, and
tracheoles to transport
metabolic gasses to and from tissue. Some terrestrial
woodlice have evolved
pseudotrachea, a system which is also called corpus alatum, and is made up of air tubes that delivers oxygen to their
hemolymph; a similar system has been found in some
caterpillars. The distribution of spiracles can vary greatly among the many
orders of
insects, but in general each segment of the body can have no more than one pair of spiracles, each of which connects to an atrium and has a relatively large tracheal tube behind it. The tracheae are invaginations of the cuticular
exoskeleton that branch (anastomose) throughout the body with diameters from only a few micrometers up to 0.8mm. The smallest tubes, tracheoles, penetrate cells and serve as sites of
diffusion for
water,
oxygen, and
carbon dioxide. Gas may be conducted through the respiratory system by means of active
ventilation or passive
diffusion. Unlike
vertebrates, insects do not generally carry
oxygen in their
hemolymph; this is one of the factors that may limit their size.
A tracheal tube may contain ridge-like circumferential rings of
taenidia in various
geometries such as or
helices.
In the
head,
thorax, or
abdomen, tracheae may also be connected to air sacs. Many insects, such as
grasshoppers and
bees, which actively pump the air sacs in their abdomen, are able to control the flow of air through their body. In some aquatic insects, the tracheae exchange gas through the body wall directly, in the form of a
gill. Note that despite being internal, the tracheae of arthropods are shed during moulting (
ecdysis).
References
★
Chapter 25: The Open Hemolymph System of Holometabola and Its Relation to the Tracheal Space. In "Microscopic Anatomy of Invertebrates", Wasserthal, Lutz T., , , Wiley-Liss, Inc., 1998, ISBN 0-471-15955-7
★
Tracheal Respiration in Insects Visualized with Synchrotron X-ray Imaging, Westneat, Mark W.; Betz, Oliver; Blob, Richard W.; Fezzaa, Kamel; Cooper, James W.; Lee, Wah-Keat, , , Science, January 2003