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Phylum Mollusca > 100,000 extant species
At least 45,000 extinct species Nice fossil history based on shells Fossils from Pre-Cambrian Importance? Shells - collectors, jewelry food
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Mollusca characteristics:
1. Foot 2. Mantle 3. Secretes shell
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Shell: 3 layers
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Periostracum: horny protein, conchiolin in some
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Prismatic layer: calcite crystals w/membranes between
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Nacreous layer: CaCo3
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Mollusca characteristics:
1. Foot 2. Mantle 3. Secretes shell 4. External surfaces - ciliated epidermis w/ mucous glands Food capture, feeding, locomotion, cleaning body surfaces
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Cilia move mucous and create water flow
Gas exchange + bring food in Sorting surfaces separate food particles by size
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Cilia over gill surface
Water movement opposite of blood flow
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5. Coelom is reduced Only pericardial cavity
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6. Open circulatory system
Blood sinuses (no capillaries) Heart = one or two auricles collecting chambers one ventricle pumping chamber
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More circ. system Hemocyanin pigment in blood (copper)
Blood w/ O2 = blue Blood w/o O2 = colorless Pulmonate gastropods have hemoglobin Cephalopods have closed circulatory system
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7. Digestive system Sclerotized buccal cavity Tubular esophagus
Cone-shaped stomach Long, coiled intestine
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Radula Chitin-toothed Rasping organ for scraping algae
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Stomach Contains style sac, rotates contents
Pulls strands of mucous from esophagus Mucous viscosity decreases w/ low pH Stomach wall is chitinized Crystalline rod = hyaline mucoprotein Style has hydrolase digestive enzymes
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Stomach, cont. Sort food particles by size
Intracellular digestion in digestive gland walls Some extracellular dig. in stomach Carnivores have no style
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Sorting in stomach
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Intestine Fecal compaction Anus opens into mantle cavity
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8. Nitrogenous waste Pair of coelomoducts
Open to pericardial cavity Discharge into mantle cavity via nephridiopores Probably not homologous to annelid metanephridia (annelid origin = mesoderm; mollusk origin = ectoderm)
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Waste product? Ammonia in aquatic molluscs
Uric acid in terrestrial molluscs
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9. Nervous system - varied
Polyplacophora (chitons) - decentralized, no ganglia Cephalopods - as developed as in vert’s Primitive gastropods: Nerve ring around esophagus, 2 pair of major nerve cords
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Reproduction and development
Pair of gonads in coelom Eggs + sperm into pericardial cavity, outside via coelomoducts Fert external in sea water Molluscs mostly dioecious, some gastropods hermaphroditic
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Most gastropods, all cephalopods:
Sperm transferred to female’s mantle cavity Internal fertilization Hermaphroditic gastropods do reciprocal cross-fertilization
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Development Trochophore larvae = free-swimming eye stomach prototroch
ciliated band mouth intestine protonephridium anus
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Trochophore larvae Archaeogastropoda Polyplacophora Aplacophora
Most marine bivalves Develops into veliger larvae Foot, shell, other structures appear
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Phylogenetic significance of trochophore larvae
Hatschik (1878) Present in molluscs, annelids, other phyla Promotes ctenophora - trochophore theory of bilateral animals from radial ancestors body shape, apical sense organs, statocysts, nervous systems
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Problem with ctenophora-trochophore connection
Flatworms don’t fit Degenerate annelids?
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7 mollusca classes Polyplacophora Aplacophora Monoplacophora
Gastropoda Scaphopoda Bivalvia Cephalopoda
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Class Polyplacophora Chitons and oval-flattened beasts - mostly in rocky intertidal zones All marine, ~ 800 spp. Mostly cm Largest (30 cm)is Cryptochiton stelleri from N. Pacific coast of N. America = Pacific gumshoe chiton
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Chiton characteristics:
Most feed on algae and micro-organisms on rock surfaces Few are predators on small inverts 1. Rudimentary head No tentacles or eyes
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Characters 2. Mantle covers dorsal surface 3. Broad, ventral foot
Secretes 8-piece shell 3. Broad, ventral foot 4. Many paired gills in mantle cavity 5. Anterior mouth with radula
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Repro: 6. Dioecious trochophore larvae, no veliger
external fert. in sea water mouth Gills in mantle cavity mantle foot
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Classification of Polyplacophora - 2 orders
Order Lepidopleurida: few genera, Hanleya NE coast Order Chitonida - most chitons Chaetopleura (New England - Fl) Chiton (gulf coast) Katherina (N. Pacific coast) Cryptochiton (N. Pacific coast) Mopalia Ishnochiton
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Class Aplacophora Solenogasters are worm-like molluscs cm long Largest is Epimenia verrucova; 30 cm All marine Mostly deep waters, m Some crawl and feed on hydroids and corals Poorly known, seldom seen, ~ 250 spp.
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Characteristics: 1. Worm-like body shape 2. No shell, mantle, or foot
3. Cuticle w/layers of imbedded calcareous spicules 4. Ventral surface has longitudinal pedal groove 5. Hermaphroditic 6. Radula well-developed
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Pedal groove cloaca
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Class Monoplacophora Originally known only from fossils
Living Neopalina from 3600 m in Pacific Ocean coast of Costa Rica (1952) Two genera Neopalina (7 spp.) and Vema
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Characteristics: 1. Dorsal surface covered by flat conical shell.
2. Ventral surface with mantle, paired gills and foot. 3. Multiple paired gills, coelomoducts, heart chambers, gonads, and retractor muscles.
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Neopalina: Dorsal Ventral
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Dissection: bivalve umbo anterior
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Remove valve
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