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1 Phylum Mollusca BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson
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2 Phylum Mollusca
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3 Numbers of species Echinodermata Ciliophora Chordata Mollusca Platyhelminthes Nematoda Porifera Annelida Other Apicomplex Sarcomastigophora Arthropoda
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4 Molluscs 50,000 -100,000 living species 35,000 extinct species Largest = 1000 pounds 80% less than 5 cm Soft body Most have a shell Most marine Snails terrestrial –Most habitat
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5 Phylum Mollusca Ventral Foot –Locomotion Mantle –Encloses mantle cavity Shell Radula Coelom (eucoelomate) Metanephridia Open circulatory system –Closed in cephalopods
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6 Economics Pearls Burrowing shipworms Snails & slugs –Garden pests –Food –Intermediate hosts for parasites
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7 Trochophore Larva Same type as Phylum Annelida
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8 MyxozoaMyxozoa ArthropodaArthropoda AnnelidaAnnelida MolluscaMollusca LophophoresLophophores HemichordataHemichordata VertebrataVertebrata OtherpseudocoelomatesOtherpseudocoelomates NematodaNematoda PoriferaPorifera CtenophoraCtenophora CnidariaCnidaria PlacozoaPlacozoa PlatyhelminthesPlatyhelminthes NemerteaNemertea CiliophoraCiliophora SarcomastigophoraSarcomastigophora MicrosporaMicrospora ApicomplexaApicomplexa MesozoaMesozoa EchinodermataEchinodermata CrustaceaCrustacea ChelicerataChelicerata UniramiaUniramia Other Chordata
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9 Generalized Mollusc
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10 Body Plan Mantle cavity CtenidiumCtenidium Pericardial cavity MetanephridiumMetanephridium RadulaRadula GonadGonad Stomach and digestive gland FootFoot
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11 Dorsal mantle covers the visceral mass.
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12 Secretes the shell
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13 Ctenidium (Respiration)
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14 Complete digestive system
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15 Paired ventral nerve cords
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16 Radula
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17 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Source: From A Life of Invertebrates, Copyright © 1979 W. D. Russell-Hunter. Radular Structure
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18 Coelom - metanephridia
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19 Class Polyplacophora Chitons
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20 Class Polyplacophora Eight dorsal plates Reduced head Radula reinforced with iron –Scrape algae from rocks
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21 Class Polyplacophora Mantle cavity MouthMouth CtenidiumCtenidium FootFoot AnusAnus
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22 Class Polyplacophora MouthMouth DigestiveglandDigestivegland StomachStomachGonadGonad Pericardial cavity NephridiumNephridium AnusAnus
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23 Class Bivalvia Clams, Oysters, Shipworms
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24 Class Bivalvia Two shells Most are filter feeders No head or radula Burrow –Sand, wood, rocks
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27 Giant Clam & Burrowing Clam Siphon
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28 Zebra Mussel Environmental Pest Ballast water of ships from Europe in 1986 Attack be secreting adhesive byssal threads –Each other –Other mussels –Man made objects Pipes, plumbing
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29 Zebra Mussel Live in high densities Feed on phytoplankton Reproduce rapidly
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30 Zebra Mussel Attach to native mussels Killed all native mussels in Lake Erie
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31 Distribution of Zebra Mussel
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32 Bivalve structures IncurrentsiphonIncurrentsiphon CtenidiumCtenidium ExcurrentsiphonExcurrentsiphon HingeHinge FootFoot Labial palp
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33 Clam anatomy Pericardial cavity HeartHeart GonadGonadIntestineIntestine StomachStomach IncurrentIncurrent ExcurrentExcurrent IntestineIntestine MetanephridiumMetanephridium
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34 Clam anatomy GonadGonadIntestineIntestine StomachStomach IncurrentIncurrent ExcurrentExcurrent DigestiveglandDigestivegland
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35 Clam anatomy Pericardial cavity HeartHeart IncurrentIncurrent ExcurrentExcurrent IntestineIntestine
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36 Clam anatomy Pericardial cavity HeartHeart GonadGonad IncurrentIncurrent ExcurrentExcurrent IntestineIntestine MetanephridiumMetanephridium
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37 Oysters
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38 Pearl formation Developing pearl EpitheliumEpithelium ShellShell Irritant lodged between shell and mantle Layers of nacre secreted around foreign material
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39 Scallops
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40 Shipworms
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41 Class Gastropoda Snails, Slugs, Conchs, Limpets
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42 Class Gastropoda One shell (if present) Torsion of body
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44 Snail Terrestrail Mantle cavity functions as lung
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45 Snail Tentacle (Eye stalks) TentacleTentacle PneumostomePneumostome AnusAnus FootFoot MouthMouth Genital pore ShellShell
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46 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Internal Structure of a Generalized Gastropod
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47 Nudibranch No shell Dorsal projections –Gills –Nematocyst discharge
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48 Abalone Several holes in top of shell –Excrete waste Food for man
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49 Slug No shell Garden pests
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50 Limpet Herbivores Cling to rocks or other surfaces
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51 Conch Large shell Marine Many are predators
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52 Class Cephalopoda Squids, Octopuses, Nautiluses
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53 Class Cephalopoda Shell in squid and octopus absent or vestigial Jet propulsion Ink sac Foot modified into arms and tentacles Marine All predators
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54 Squid Dorsal Ventral Posterior surface Right Left
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55 Squid FinFin ArmArm Funnel (siphon) EyeEye TentacleTentacle CollarCollar
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56 Squid Shell (Pen) CtenidiumCtenidium FunnelFunnel SystemicheartSystemicheart Branchial heart
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57 Squid Male TestisTestis Hectocotylous arm PenisPenis
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58 Squid Female Ovary with eggs Nidamental glands Oviducal gland Oviducal opening
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59 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cephalopod Eye
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60 Octopus Eight arms with suckers Crawl or eject water from siphon Change skin color –chromatophores Most intelligent invertebrate
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61 Nautilus Up to 94 tentacles –No suckers Shell with many chambers –Lives in outermost chamber
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62 Ammonoids Extinct Devonian to Cretaceous –400 to 65 MYA Died out with dinosaurs
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63 Class Scaphopoda Tooth shells Shell opens on both ends Burrow into mud No gills –Mantle for gas exchange Feed on detritus and protozoa
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64 Class Scaphododa
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65 The End
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