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Published byRaymond Stevenson Modified over 9 years ago
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Contains over 100,000 species, making it the 2 nd largest animal phylum Includes: snails, chitons, clams, slugs and squids
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Snails, clams and squid look nothing alike, but they have a few shared features These common features are: Foot Mantle Radula
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A muscular organ, shaped and used differently by different species Used for digging, grasping, or creeping Examples: Pelecypoda (Bivalvia) – “hatchet – shaped foot” Clams & Oysters - use the foot for digging Gastropoda – “Stomach foot” Snails – use the foot to crawl; stomach is in the foot Cephalopoda – “Head foot” Octopi and Squids – foot is modified into tentacles that attach to the head; used for moving, grasping, holding, sinking ships…
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The mantle produces the shell and creates the color patterns in most mollusks The shell is an exoskeleton, even if its covered, and grows with the mollusk Examples: A chiton’s mantle produces jointed plates that allow it to curl up into a ball and to move flexibly Bivalves produce two shells hinged at the top Snails (Gastropoda) produce a single, spiral-shaped shell The mantle is inside the shell, so it can’t be seen In other types of gastropods the mantle covers the outside of the shell, making it look shiny and new in appearance In Cephalopods and some gastropods (like sea hares), the shell is very small and the mantle completely covers it Nudibranchs (sea slugs) are shell-less gastropods
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See Fig 6-2 & 6-3 Radula – specially adapted rasp-like tongue Proboscis – an extension of the mouth Examples: Herbivorous snails have a mouth with radula containing many rows, each with 5-7 complex teeth Use the radula like a file Carnivorous snails (ex: cone shells) have hollow, barbed, radular teeth (like harpoons) that they thrust into their prey and inject venom through them These barbs shoot out through the proboscis Some cone shell venom is strong enough to kill humans
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Foot Clams – their hatchet-shaped foot is used for moving and burrowing in mud or sand Oyster & mussels – smaller foot used for attaching themselves to a hard substrate Scallops – don’t use foot for moving; they clap their shells together to move by jet propulsion Siphons Two tubes that allow water to enter and exit the bivalve Water coming in is oxygen and nutrient rich The water flows across the gills, O2 and CO2 are exchanged and food particles are trapped by mucus Cilia Tiny, hair-like structures that move trapped food towards the mouth Located on the gills Palps Lip-like structures help sort the food and direct it to the mouth * See Table 6-1 for a glossary for more bivalve anatomy
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Pearls In some bivalves (like oysters) irritating particles (indigestible food particles and sand) get lodged between the shell and mantle The bivalve will then begin secreting a pearly substance called nacre These layers of nacre eventually form pearls Food Many bivalves are valued as a food source They can be very sensitive to the environment; they themselves are not sensitive to the toxicity; but they absorb it into their tissues which is then transferred to the consumer
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