Ecdysis is the
molting[?] of the
cuticula[?] in
arthropods and related groups (
Ecdysozoa). Since the cuticula of these animals is also the skeletal support of the body and is inelastic, it is shed during growth and a new covering of larger dimensions is formed. In preparation for ecdysis the arthropod will become inactive for a period of time, and then by crawling movements pushes forward in the old
integument, which splits down the back allowing the animal to emerge. During the resting period preparation is made by the secretion of fluid from the molting glands of the cellular layer and the loosening of the underpart of the cuticula. Following the shedding of the old cuticula, a new layer is secreted during a second period of inactivity. All cuticular structures are shed at ecdysis, including the terminal linings of the
alimentary tract and of the
tracheae if they are present.
The molting of reptiles is sometimes called ecdysis.
Related to the word ecdysis is ecdysiast, a euphemism for a striptease dancer.
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