The
cephalothorax is a
tagma of various
arthropods, comprising the head and the
thorax fused together, as distinct from the
abdomen behind. (The terms
prosoma and
opisthosoma are equivalent to
cephalothorax and
abdomen in some groups.) The word
cephalothorax is derived from the
Greek words for head (, ) and thorax (, ). This fusion of the head and thorax is seen in
chelicerates and
crustaceans; in other groups, such as the
Hexapoda (including
insects), the head remains free of the thorax. In
horseshoe crabs and many
crustaceans, a hard shell called the
carapace covers the cephalothorax.