The Moult reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Moult

For thoughtful child sponsors
In birds, moulting or molting is the routine shedding of old feathers. Also, the shedding of old skin in reptiles.

In arthropods, such as insects, arachnids and crustaceans, molting describes the shedding of the exoskeleton, typically to allow for further growth. See ecdysis.

Table of contents
1 Moulting in birds:
2 Moulting in Arachnids
3 Moulting in Reptiles
4 Moulting in Insects

Moulting in birds:

Moulting in birds is a comparatively slow process, as a bird never sheds all its feathers at once; it must keep enough of its feathers to regulate its body temperature and repel moisture. Some species of wild bird become flightless during an annual "wing moult" and must seek protected habitat with a reliable food supply during that time. A moulting bird should never have any bald spots. If a pet bird has any bald spots, the bird should be brought to an avian veterinarian to search for possible causes for the baldness, which may include giardia, mites, or feather-plucking.

The process of moulting

1. The bird begins to shed some old feathers

2. Pin feathers grow in to replace the old feathers

3. As the pin feathers become full feathers, other feathers are shed.

This is a cyclical process that happens in many phases. In general, a moult begins at a bird's head, progresses down the body to its wings and torso, and finishes with the tail feathers.

Moulting in Arachnids

The exoskeleton of an archnid is hard. This does not allow for growth. To overcome this problem, spiders will shed their old exoskeletons, allowing a new and larger one to replace it. The new larger exoskeleton fits underneith the old one, because it is still elastic. A layer of fluid seperates the new and old skeletons. As the old skeleton is shed, the new one will expand to its full size, before harding out on contact with air. The arachnid will have to flex its new exoskeleton, or it will become inflexible, less mobile untill their next moult. Other reasons for moulting are damaged tissue and missing limbs. Over a series of moults, a missing limb can be regenerated, each moult the stump being a little larger untill it is normal sized again. After moulting, the exoskeleton is still delicate and the arachnid is vulnerable to predators or even its prey.

The Process of Moulting with Spiders, especially Tarantula's

Before moulting, some spiders will not eat for weeks, while others will eat up to the moment of moulthing. Likewise after a moult, some spiders will not eat for days or even weeks.

this process could be identical to that of other arachnids, but I don't know that for sure.

Moulting in Reptiles

this sub-article is a stub

Moulting in Insects

this sub-article is a stub



Moult (pro. MOOL) is a commune of the département of Calvados, in the Basse-Normandie région, in France. Its postal code is 14370. The INSEE code is 14456.