
Scorpions are arthropods
distinguished by such striking features as large pedipalps
furnished with stout claws, and an abdomen divided into two
portions--a broad, seven-segmented preabdomen, and a
five-segmented posterior with a slender tail ending in a sting.
The base of the sting contains a pair of poison glands opening
near the tip. Scorpions usually thrive in hot and tropical
countries. They reach up to 100 to 125 mm (4 to 5 in) in
length--some species taking years to attain maturity--and are
nocturnal animals, concealed by day in protected places.
Predatory carnivores, they feed on insects and spiders, capturing
the prey with their pedipalps and killing with their sting. Jaw like appendages near the mouth crush the prey, over which the
scorpion then discharges a digestive fluid and sucks up the
liquefied prey. Young scorpions are born alive and are then
carried on the mother's body for a short time. Few scorpions are
dangerous to humans, and ordinarily they do not attack unless
disturbed. The only species in the United States with a
potentially fatal sting, Centruroides sculpturatus, is yellow to
yellow brown with two black stripes on the back. The sting from
most species produces pain and swelling. Serums are available to
relieve the more severe symptoms. Scorpions are classified in the
class Arachnida, phylum Arthropoda. There are six
families--including the important Buthidae, which includes many
common yellow species--and more than 30 species occur in the
southern and western United States.
Bibliography: Cloudsley-Thompson, J. L., ed.,
Ecophysiology of Desert Arthropods and Reptiles (1991); Polis, G.
A., ed., The Biology of Scorpions (1990).
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