Triops longicaudatus is usually greyish yellow or brown in colour, and differs from many other species by the absence of the second
maxilla. Apart from
Triops cancriformis, it is the only tadpole shrimp species whose individuals display as many as three reproductive strategies: bisexual, unisexual (
parthenogenetic), and
hermaphroditic; see
below.
Triops cancriformis is easily recognizable by its yellow
carapace with dark spots, whilst
T. longicaudatus individuals have a uniform carapace. As its name suggests, its elongated tail structures (
cercopods) are often nearly as long as the rest of the body; including the cercopods, the body may reach in length. The head of
Triops longicaudatus is typical of crustaceans and consists of five segments, but there is a tendency toward reduction of cephalic
appendages. The
trunk is not distinctly divided into
thorax and
abdomen. Most trunk segments bear appendages. Zoologists find it difficult to decide where the thorax stops and the abdomen begins; the debate is seemingly endless. The first eleven trunk segments each bear a single pair of limbs. They are followed by segments that are fused similarly to those of
millipedes, and as a result, each segment bears up to six pairs of limbs. The trunk ends with a region of limbless segments. Some zoologists consider the thorax to consist of the two regions with appendages, and the abdomen the region without appendages. Others believe the region of fused segments to be part of the abdomen. For clarity, this article uses "thorax" to mean the two body regions with limbs.
Carapace There is a
carapace present, but no
cephalothorax, since no thoracic segment is fused with the head. The terms
carapace and
cephalothorax often are confused, but should not be. The carapace of crustaceans is a fold of the body wall of the fifth head segment.
Head The head bears a pair of
dorsal compound eyes that lie close to each other and are nearly fused together. The compound eyes are generally sessile (not stalked). In addition, there is a
naupliar ocellus (the "third eye") between them. The compound eyes are on the surface of the head, but the ocellus is deep within the head. All the eyes, however, are easily visible through the shell covering of the head. A distinct horizontal groove, known as the mandibular groove, marks the division between the anterior three head segments and the posterior two. Posterior to it is the cervical groove, marking the division between the head and the thorax. On the
ventral side of the head is a lenslike window, admitting light to the naupliar eye, which is aimed both dorsally and ventrally. The first antennae (antennules) are small, slender filaments on the ventral surface of the head, at about the same level as the eyes. The second antennae are similar and lie laterally to the first. They are nonfunctioning. The large, well-developed
mandibles oppose each other across the ventral midline. The opposing surfaces bear strong brownish teeth. As the crustacean periodically opens and closes the mandibles the teeth move apart and close together. Of the usual crustacean head appendages, only the mandibles are well developed. In
Triops longicaudatus, the larger second maxillae are absent, only
maxillules being present.
Thorax The anterior thorax consists of eleven segments, each bearing a pair of appendages, called thoracopods or
pereiopods. None of the thoracopods are modified into
maxillipeds for feeding. The posterior thorax consists of 16–25 segments, incompletely separated to form
rings. Each ring may consist of as many as six fused segments and bear up to six pairs of appendages (there are 54–66 limbs altogether). Most of the thoracic appendages resemble each other, but the first eleven pairs are best developed. There is a slight tendency to regional specialization and the first pair of legs is unlike the rest. It is an elongated,
cheliped-like structure with a sensory function, while all the other appendages aid in feeding, respiration, and locomotion. In females, the eleventh pair of legs is modified into brood pouches. The many legs posterior to the eleventh pair move the spent feeding and respiratory currents away.
Abdomen The posterior 5–14 rings at the end of the body do not bear appendages. At the end of the body is a pleotelson (fusion of the last abdominal segment and the
telson) connected to long, multisegmented
uropods.
Feeding behaviour The feeding method of tadpole shrimps is similar to that proposed for the ancestral
crustacean. The anterior appendages (second pair to tenth pair) stir sediments and swirl muddy water into the wide, midventral food groove. The
gnathobases (inward-facing lobes at the base of the leg) guide food anteriorly to the mouth. The large flat exopods (outward-facing lobes at the end of the leg) stir and lift the sediments. Fine silt particles and water escape easily, but large, coarse food particles are torn into smaller pieces by the blade-like, inward-facing lobes called
endopods at the end of the leg.
Internal anatomy The heart of tadpole shrimps is a long dorsal tube in the anterior eleven trunk segments. It has a pair of
ostia in each of these segments. Sometimes
hemoglobin is present in its blood and the crustacean may be pink as a result. The
excretory organs are the paired maxillary
glands, located on the segment of the second maxilla. The long looped ducts of these glands can be seen in the carapace. The role of the maxillary glands is primarily
osmoregulatory.
Nitrogen, in the form of
ammonia, is lost by
diffusion across the
gill surfaces. ==Reproduction and development==