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Published byMiranda Tracey Miller Modified over 9 years ago
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PHYLUM MOLLUSCA not drab and mundane as found on the N.A. continent
of the eight classes, only 3 are common “MALACOLOGY” The study of molluscs
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50, ,000 living species 35,000 extinct species Largest = 1000 lbs. 80% less than 5 cm
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Classes of Mollusca Class Bivalvia (Clams, oysters)
Class Gastropoda (snails, slugs) Class Cephalopoda (Squid, octopus) Class Polyplacophora (Chitons) Additional classes not covered Class Scaphopoda Class Caudofoveata Class Solengastres Class Monoplacophora
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Unifying characteristics “INDICATORS OF COMMON ANCESTRY”
1. Visceral mass (internal organs) heart, digestion excretion, reproduction 2. Mantle- tissue surrounding the visceral cavity, secretes shell (which may be present or absent) 3. Muscular foot - organ for propulsion 4. Head- mouth, sense organs, cerebral ganglia 5. Trochophore- juvenile larvae form
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6. Radula Ribbon of small teeth that are used to feed Made of chitin 7. Siphon 8. Gas exchange through gills Habitat Fresh and salt water and a few terrestrial
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Trochophore Larva All the members of this phylum start their life as a free living “trochophore”
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Generalized Mollusk Anatomy
Fig. 16.2
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Body Plan Pericardial cavity Metanephridium Mantle cavity Gonad
Ctenidium Radula Foot Stomach and digestive gland
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Dorsal mantle covers the visceral mass.
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Secretes the shell
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Ctenidium (Respiration)
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Complete digestive system
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Paired ventral nerve cords
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Radula
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Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Radular Structure Source: From A Life of Invertebrates, Copyright © 1979 W. D. Russell-Hunter.
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Radula
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Coelom - metanephridia
Skip this diagram
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CLASSES
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Class Polyplacophora Chitons
Fig. 16.1a
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Class Polyplacophora Eight dorsal plates Reduced head
Radula reinforced with iron Scrape algae from rocks Multiple gills, along sides of body between foot and mantle edge
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Class Polyplacophora Mouth Mantle cavity Ctenidium Foot Anus
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Class Polyplacophora Stomach Gonad Digestive gland Pericardial cavity
Mouth Nephridium Anus
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Chitons
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Class Gastropoda Snails, Slugs, Conchs, Limpets
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Class Gastropoda “STOMACH FOOT” One shell (if present) single muscular foot - operculum- trap door to close for protection - radula- scraping tongue - can be parasites -some can have symbiotic relationship with algae "zooxanthellae”
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Torsion of body Fig
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Batton the Hatches! Snails have a trap door called the operculum
They can close it to prevent water loss or to avoid being eaten!
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Snail Terrestrail Mantle cavity functions as lung
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Snail Pneumostome Tentacle (Eye stalks) Shell Anus Tentacle Foot Mouth
Genital pore
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Internal Structure of a Generalized Gastropod
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Internal Structure of a Generalized Gastropod
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Helix – garden snail I’ll get there by midnight, I think…
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Nudibranch No shell Dorsal projections Gills Nematocyst discharge
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Abalone Several holes in top of shell Excrete waste Food for man
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Interesting but don’t write this?
Nudibranchs Gastropods that have lost their shell Breathe through their cerata (colorful branches on their dorsal side) Often produce toxic chemicals for protection Or steal undischarged nematocysts taken from their prey.
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Slug No shell Garden pests
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Limpet Herbivores Cling to rocks or other surfaces
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Conch Large shell Marine Many are predators
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Class Bivalvia Clams, Oysters, Shipworms
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Class Bivalvia Two shells
shell has two lateral valves with dorsal hinge Most are filter feeders No head or radula Body enclosed in mantle Head greatly reduced No radula No eyes, a few species with eyes on mantle margin foot usually wedge-shaped Burrow Sand, wood, rocks
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Fig b
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Fig
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Giant Clam & Burrowing Clam
Siphon
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It’s Like a Straw Siphon – tube that sticks out of shell
Incurrent siphon takes in water carrying food and oxygen Excurrent siphon carries water containing wastes and CO2 out Gooey duct
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Bivalves Body is laterally compressed Two shells, hinged together
No head, no radula Gills used to obtain oxygen and to filter out small food particles from the water Adductor muscles keep shells closed As bivalve grows, it adds a layer to its shell Bivalves
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Figure 16.31a
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Clam Dissection
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The Blue Mussel Uses byssal threads to attach to the substrate
Threads are secreted by the mussel’s foot Anchors mussel in place on rocks to make filter feeding easier Experimented with as a dental adhesive
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Scallops
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Shipworms
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Class Cephalopoda Squids, Octopuses, Nautiluses
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Giant Squid “A live giant squid (Architeuthis) measuring roughly 25 feet long attacks a baited fishing line off the Ogasawara Islands. Japanese scientists recently released the first-ever images of a live giant squid in the wild. Many giant squid have washed up on beaches or have been found dead or dying in fishing nets. This specimen was found in New Zealand in 1996.”
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http://news. nationalgeographic. com/news/2006/12/061222-giant-squid
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- Intelligent and have a complex eye (as in humans) can form images by moving the lens in and out (How do we focus?) - chromatophore- pigment sacks with the 3 primary colors. Nerves cause them to expand and contract. (spots to dots) - octopus crawls and squids swim in schools (jet propulsion) Marine
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Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cephalopod Eye
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Class Cephalopoda Shell in squid and octopus absent or vestigial
Ink sac Foot modified into arms and tentacles All predators high extinction 10,000 fossils down to 400 species today
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Ammonoids Extinct Devonian to Cretaceous Died out with dinosaurs
400 to 65 MYA Died out with dinosaurs
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Squid “you will learn this when we do the dissection”
Posterior surface Right Ventral Dorsal Left
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Squid Tentacle Arm Funnel (siphon) Fin Collar Eye
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Squid Shell (Pen) Systemic heart Branchial heart Ctenidium Funnel 4
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Squid Male Testis Penis Hectocotylous arm
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Squid Female Ovary with eggs Oviducal gland Nidamental glands
Oviducal opening
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Octopus Eight arms with suckers Most intelligent invertebrate
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Cuttlefish
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Who Wants a Snack? Catches prey with tentacles
Suction disks on tentacles used to grasp and hold prey Bite from beak kills prey Poisonous venom in some cases
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Squid
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Nautilus Up to 94 tentacles Shell with many chambers No suckers
Lives in outermost chamber
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Chambered Nautilus
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But They Don’t Have Shells! How do they protect themselves?
Fast swimmers (jet propulsion) Force water out the mantle cavity through the siphon. The siphon can move and point the animal in any direction Camouflage: Chromatophores Ink Cloud Intelligence Vision
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Economics Pearls Burrowing shipworms Snails & slugs Garden pests Food
Intermediate hosts for parasites
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Oysters
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Pearl formation Shell Developing pearl Epithelium
Irritant lodged between shell and mantle Layers of nacre secreted around foreign material
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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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Zebra Mussel Live in high densities Feed on phytoplankton
Reproduce rapidly
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Zebra Mussel Attach to native mussels
Killed all native mussels in Lake Erie
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Distribution of Zebra Mussel
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