Mollusk - Kellam High School Oceanography Main Menu
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Transcript Mollusk - Kellam High School Oceanography Main Menu
Sea Slug
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Mollusk Terms
LATIN LIVES
Phora = Bearing
Mono = One
Placo = Plate
Cephalo = Head
Scapho = Sword
Pelecy = Hatchet
Poda = Foot
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Phylum Mollusca Classes
Click on any Scientific Name to go to that Class
Aplacophora - mollusks without shells
Pelecypoda ( Bivalve) - clams, oysters, mussels, second
largest species.
Cephalopoda – squid, octopus, chambered nautilus
Gastropoda ( Univalve) – snails, slugs, abalones, whelks,
periwinkles, giant conch, most species
Monoplacophora - mollusks with one shell, ancient
Polyplacophora ( Amphineura) – chiton, eight plates,
intertidal
Scaphopoda - a tubular shell - tusk shells
General information
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Interesting Facts
Start Over
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Invertebrates with
Soft Bodies
“Mollusk”
octopus
They
have existed for 600
million years.
Some are very primitive and
some are quite intelligent
creatures.
They are used commercially
in many ways.
squid
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snail
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Mollusk ~ Snail
Second largest
group in the animal
kingdom
There are more
than 150,000 living
species of the
mollusk.
Half of the species
are marine.
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MOLLUSK ANATOMY
Mollusks vary greatly in the development of each of the
three body sections.
Three main body sections
1.
Head = Eyes, Mouth ( Radula –rasping sucking
tongue) and Tentacles
2.
Visceral Mass = Mantle which secretes the shell, and
the gills, intestines, kidneys, heart.
3.
Foot = large muscular organ to move the body.
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Mollusk Anatomy
Visceral Mass
Shell Coelom
Anus
Mantle Cavity
Foot
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Nephridium
Gill
Heart
Mantle
Gonad
Stomach
Intestine
Esophagus
Mouth
Nerve Cords
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Mollusk reproduction
Most mollusks have separate females and males;
gonads are in the visceral mass ~ Sperm or eggs are
produced by meiosis.
Snails are hermaphrodites bearing both female and
male gonads in same individuals.
Sea Slug
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Monoplacophorans
This is the deep- sea dwelling class that was
the ancestor of all other mollusks.
These animals were thought to be extinct
until 1952
At present, only a few living species are
known to exist.
There are many fossils .
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Monoplacophorans
Nepolina
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Monoplacophorans
Fossil Specimens
Cyrtolites
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Archinacella
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Aplacophorans
These
organisms lack
shells and are wormlike in body form.
They have calcareous
scales or spicules in
their integument.
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Aplacophorans
Soleonogasters which also live on the bottom feed on
cnidarians (Jellyfish – Corals).
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Whelk
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Mollusks Gastropoda (Univalve)
Class
Gastropodameaning stomach foot
Univalve
= one valve or
one shell
Conch
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Mollusks - Gastropods
snails, slugs, abalones, whelks, periwinkles, giant conch
– giant conch – 1
foot length
Urosalprix – “oyster drill”
bores hole in oyster and
digests through the hole.
Largest
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Mollusks - Gastropods
Snails, nudibranchs, cowries, whelks
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Sea Slugs
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Nudibranchs with
symbiotic algae
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Glaucus atlanticus
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Abalone
The Abalone shell is used to make jewelry
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Abalone
Abalone is served in fine restaurants
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Periwinkle
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Periwinkle
Periwinkles
feed on algae and
seaweed.
They are found at the water's
edge on Mash grasses.
They
move up and down the
grasses in synch with the tides.
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Snails As Bird food
Snails provide an immense amount of food for
waterfowl in the wetlands.
Mallard - 16%
Pintail - 15%
Blue winged Teal - 38%
Northern Shoveler - 40%
Gadwall - 4%
The endangered
Whooping Crane – 60%
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Whooping Crane
eats snails
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Oyster Shell
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Phylum Mollusca
Class Bivalvia ( PELECYPODA)
Class consist of;
clams, oysters, scallops, mussels
mussels
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What are the shells of mollusks
made of?
Calcareous
material that
resembles
limestone
Oyster Shells
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Scallop
Eyes
Gills (Cilia)
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Clam
Gills with Cilia
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What do clams use for digging
into the sand?
A muscular, hatchet-shaped foot extends from
between the shells and is used for digging.
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Octopus
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Cephalopoda
Class
Cephalopoda are
among the most active,
interesting and intelligent of
the Mollusk.
Cephalopoda means headfoot. Their head is attached
to the foot which become
tentacles
octopus
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Class Cephalopoda
octopus
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Shell reduced & internalized in squid ( beak)
No shell in octopus
Largest invertebrates
Possess eyes and tentacles
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Mollusks - Cephalopods
All
are carnivorous
octopus
Siphon
allows jet
propulsion in squid
Defenses
include ink
(squid, octopus) and
change in coloration of
octopus
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Mollusks - Cephalopods
Squid, chambered nautilus, cuttlefish, octopus
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Squid
Shell reduced to pen made of chitin
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Cuttlefish
CuttleFish
Cuttlefishes have Carbonate shells
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cephalopods
The only
cephalopods with a
shell are a few
species of
nautiluses
Nautilus means
shell with
chambers.
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Nautilus
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Chiton
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Class Polyplacophora
Habitat: Chitons inhabit the intertidal and
subtidal regions.
They live under or on rocks with a very tight
grip to protect them from waves.
Each one consists of Eight plates
Diet: Encrusting plants and animals
Reproduction: Chitons are dioecious, meaning
there are female chitons and male chitons.
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Chiton
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Gumboot Chiton
It
is the largest species of chiton in the world,
It can grow up to 30 cm in length
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Scaphopoda
The
Scaphopoda are known as the
"tusk shells" because their shells are
conical.
The
scientific name Scaphopoda
means "shovel foot", which refers to
the "head" of the animal. It lacks eyes
and is used for burrowing into marine
mud and sediments.
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Scaphopoda
The
most distinctive feature of scaphopods is that the
tubular shell is open at both ends,
Not just one end as in most molluscs.
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Life is Tough
Scaphopods
live their
adult lives buried in sand
or mud, with their headend pointed downwards.
Only the narrow
posterior end of the shell
sticks up into the seawater
for water exchange and
waste expulsion.
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Rapa Whelk
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Introduced Species
Rapa Whelk
Came
from the Sea of Japan
The Rapa Whelk is destroying
the Mid-Atlantic natural
Whelk habitat
No predators
Reproduce rapidly
VIMS has a bounty for
catching them
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The role of the Mollusk
Can be a check on
pollution levels,
since some are filterfeeding bivalves
Pouch Snails
provides a sign for
what the water
quality is; (the
dominance of pouch
snails signifies poor
water quality)
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Mollusk provide 16% of
the Mallard Ducks Diet
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Mollusks ~ Reproduction
Some hermaphroditic
mollusks, such as
certain oysters switch
from one sex to the
other.
Sometimes
producing eggs, and
sometimes sperm
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Mollusks
Those without shells;
May spend daylight
hours under rocks
Some sea hares have a
special “ink” they
squirt.
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Sea Hare
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Mollusks ~ Make Pearls
Oyster with Pearl
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Mollusks Facts
Snails and other mollusks never seem to develop cancer;
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Mollusks
There are some negative relationships with humans
Land slugs and snails are plant eaters that do
damage to crops
Shipworms will damage wood ships- “termites
of the sea”
Shipworms
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