THE POLYPHYLETIC THEORY ; if we embrace the idea f polyphyletic origins, then arthropods are represented by as many as four phyla- each of which is presumed to have evolved separately from primitive annelid ancestors: Trilobita - 4,000 sps.+ - including all trilobites (extinct marine organisms that were abundant during the Palaeozoic era.) Chelicerata - 70,000 sps. – including spiders, scorpions, mites , ticks, horseshoe crabs, and sea spiders. Crustacea -30,000 sps. – including shrimps, crabs, lobsters, woodlice, barnacles, amphipods, branchiopods, and copepods. Uniramia – 1.2 million sps. – including onychophora, millipedes, centipedes, pauropods, symphylans, and insects. Embryological development of head and mouthparts has also been offered as evidences to support the polyphyletic hypothesis. In myriapods and insects, the head is a separate functional region. But in the crustacea and chelicerata, the head and thorax develop together as a single body region, the cephalothorax. Furthermore, within the myriapods and insects there is evidence that additional segments are added to form mouthparts, suggesting that mouthparts of chelicerates, crustaceans and other arthopods are not homologous.