Exoskeleton
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
An exoskeleton is a hard outer shell that supports and protects an animal's body. Unlike humans, who have bones inside their bodies, many animals carry their skeletons on the outside. This hard covering helps keep their shape and shields important parts inside.
Many insects, like beetles and butterflies, have exoskeletons made from a material called a cuticle. Crustaceans, such as crabs and lobsters, also have exoskeletons that protect them. Even tiny creatures called tardigrades, often known as water bears, have exoskeletons to help them survive tough conditions.
Some animals, like turtles, have both an inner skeleton and an outer shell for extra protection. Other sea creatures, including snails and clams, also have hard outer shells that act like exoskeletons. These outer skeletons are very important for keeping these animals safe and helping them move and grow.
Role
Exoskeletons are hard outer coverings that help animals in many ways. They give support, protect inside parts, and help with breathing and feeling. They also help animals move, find food, and show off to find mates. Exoskeletons keep animals safe from harm and pests, and they give places for muscles to connect.
Arthropod exoskeletons are made from a material called chitin. When mixed with calcium carbonate, they become harder and stronger but also heavier. Some animals, like molluscs, use calcium carbonates for their shells, while others, like diatoms, use silica. Some tiny organisms build their outer layers by sticking sand and shell pieces to themselves. Unlike some people think, echinoderms do not have exoskeletons—their outer layer is always inside living tissue.
Exoskeletons have developed many times in different animal groups. Other animals, like armadillos and pangolins, have tough outer coatings made from bone or hair. Reptiles like turtles and crocodiles have bony and horny scales.
Growth
Main article: Ecdysis
Because an exoskeleton is hard and cannot grow, animals with them must shed it when they get bigger. This process is called moulting or ecdysis. When it's time to shed, the animal makes a new, soft exoskeleton under the old one. After shedding the old shell, the new one is soft at first and can still grow a little before it hardens. During this time, the animal usually hides to stay safe until its new shell is ready. If an animal cannot shed its old exoskeleton when it becomes too small, it may not survive or be able to grow up properly.
Paleontological significance
Exoskeletons are important for scientists because they help preserve ancient animals. Soft parts of animals usually break down, but hard exoskeletons can become fossils. This hardening keeps the shape of the animal and can even make a mold of it.
However, because we mostly find fossils of hard parts, we know less about animals with soft bodies that did not leave fossils. The first hard exoskeletons appeared just before the Cambrian period, about 550 million years ago. These hard shells may have helped cause more animal life and new ways animals interacted. Some older animals also had tough outer shells.
Evolution
Further information: Small shelly fauna
Long ago, many animals developed hard outer shells to protect themselves. These shells were made from minerals like silica and calcium compounds.
Just before a big change in Earth's history called the Cambrian period, many different types of shells appeared quickly. Most of these shells were made from a mineral called calcium carbonate.
Some very old animals had tough outer shells that weren't made from minerals. Others, like Cloudina, had shells made from minerals.
The type of mineral in shells depends on the ocean's chemistry. Calcium carbonate can be in two forms: calcite and aragonite.
A special modern sea creature, Chrysomallon squamiferum, lives near deep-sea vents and has a shell made of aragonite. It also has armor plates made from iron sulfides.
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