Section 29.1 Notes
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Transcript Section 29.1 Notes
Mollusks
Section 29.1
Soft-bodied Animals
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Snails, slugs, oysters, clams, scallops,
octopuses, squid
A larval stage called a trochophore
Second largest phylum of animals
Found in almost all marine, freshwater
and land ecosystems
Three major classes:
Gastropods
Bivalves
Cephalopods
Key Characteristics
1.
2.
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Body cavity – a true coelom; in most species it is a
small area around the heart
Symmetry – bilateral
Three-part body plan – a.) visceral mass: central
section with organs, b.) mantle: heavy outer layer of
the body, c.) foot: muscular organ used for
movement
Organ systems – excretion, circulation, respiration,
digestion, reproduction
Shell – many have an exoskeleton of 1 or 2 shells
made of protein and calcium carbonate
Radula – most have a tongue-like organ in the
mouth with rows of pointed teeth to scrape food off
rocks
Organ Systems
1.
2.
3.
Excretion:
Body waste collects in the coelom
Cilia moves the fluid into nephridia
Fluid is filtered – useful molecules
returned to body & fluid wastes
leave
Organ Systems, continued…
Circulation:
Most have a three-chambered heart
and an open circulatory system
Octopuses and squid have a closed
circulatory system
Organ Systems, continued…
Respiration:
Most have gills located in the mantle
cavity
Land snails have no gills – but the
mantle cavity acts as a primitive lung
Organ Systems, continued…
Reproduction
Most have males and females – some
snails and slugs are hermaphrodites
Some species can change back and
forth between sexes
Gastropods
“Stomach-foot”
Snails and slugs
Mainly marine, some in freshwater or
on land
Most are herbivores
Gastropod means ‘stomach-foot’
Gastropods have a radula
Bivalves
“Two shells”
Clams, oysters, mussels, scallops
Two shells are connected to adductor
muscle which can close shell and may
also help in swimming
Most are filter feeders which use
tubes called siphons to remove food
from water
Many of these are important food
sources for people
Bivalve means ‘two-shells’
The sea scallop –
a typical bivalve
Bivalves have a muscular
foot for movement
Cephalopods
“Head-foot”
Squids, octopuses, cuttlefish,
nautiluses
Large head attached to tentacles
Tentacles have suction cups or hooks
The most intelligent of all
invertebrates
Well-developed eyes similar to
vertebrates
Cephalopods – ‘head-foot’
squid, chambered nautilus,
octopus
Cephalopods have welldeveloped eyes
Cephalopod have tentacles
with suckers