phylum mollusca - Mrs. Gallegos Website
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Transcript phylum mollusca - Mrs. Gallegos Website
PHYLUM MOLLUSCA
PHYLUM MOLLUSCA
gastropods, bivalves,cephelapods
3 GENERAL BODY REGIONS
1. head- with “brain” or sense organs
2. visceral mass- contains internal organs
3. foot- muscular part of body
CLASS GASTROPODA (STOMACH-FOOTED)
Soft body in CaCO3 shell secreted by mantle
Body is bilaterally symmetrical
Ventral muscular foot for locomotion
Radula- rasping tongue, ribbon of small teeth
used to feed on algae
“breathe” through gills
HI I’M GARY!
I’M
SPONGE
BOB’S
PET
SNAIL!
HEAD-FOOT REGION
The radula is a
rasping, protrusible
feeding structure
found in most
molluscs (not
bivalves).
Ribbon-like
membrane with rows
of tiny teeth.
CLASS GASTROPODA
The shell of a gastropod
is always one piece –
univalve – and may be
coiled or uncoiled.
The apex contains the
oldest and smallest
whorl.
Shells may coil to the
right or left – this is
genetically controlled.
CLASS GASTROPODA
Early gastropods had a
planospiral shell where
each whorl lies outside the
others.
Conispiral shells have each
whorl to the side of the
preceding one.
Bulky
Unbalanced
Shell shifts over for better
weight distribution.
CLASS GASTROPODA
Many snails can
withdraw into the
shell and close it off
with an operculum.
SNAILS
ABALONE
LIMPETS
CONCH
CONE SNAIL (car nivorous)
NUDIBRANCH (sea
slugs) gastropods that
have lost their shell
CLASS BIVALVIA
Clams, oysters, mussels
Laterally compressed body enclosed in two
shells(valves) joined at a hinge, controlled by
strong muscles
Gills used for getting 02 and filter feed
No head or radula
CLAMS- use foot to burrow
in sediment. Uses siphon
to draw in water for O2 and
food.
Largest bivalve- giant
clam up to 3ft in
length!
(Tridacna gigas)
*symbiotic zooxanthella
help its size
MUSSELS- not burrowers, secrete strong
byssal threads to attach to surfaces
SCALLOPSsome can swim
by ejecting
water rapidly
out siphon
OYSTERS- cement their
shells to a hard surface,
sometimes to other
oysters
GEODUCK
PEARL OYSTERS- when
there’s an irritant or
parasite in the mantle,
shiny layers of nacre
coats it to form pearl in
some
* Most pearls we encounter are cultured pearls
CLASS BIVALVIA
Scallops have a row of small blue eyes along the
mantle edge.
CLASS BIVALVIA
Native freshwater clams in
the U.S. are jeopardized.
Of more than 300
species once present,
12 are extinct, 42 are
endangered and 88
more are of concern.
Sensitive to water
quality changes,
Zebra mussels are a
serious exotic invader into
the Great Lakes Region.
CLASS CEPHALOPODA (“HEAD-FOOTED”)
Octopuses, squids, cuttlefish
Active lifestyles, agile swimmers
Complex nervous system, eyes similar to ours
Reduction/loss of shell
Foot is modified into tentacles/arms with
suckers
NAUTILUS
Last living type of externally-shelled cephalopod
Don’t exhibit many other squid/octopus-like
qualities
“Swimming snail”
“Jet-propulsion” of water, controlled by flexible
siphon, for quick movement
Fans out body in defense
OCTOPUSES8 long arms, lack shell,
bite prey (crabs,
lobsters, shrimp) with
beak-like jaws
Distract predators by
emitting cloud of dark
fluid produced by ink
sac
SQUID- better swimmers, elongated body, two triangular
fins, 8 arms and two tentacles w/suckers circling mouth,
shell reduced to stiff pen
Colossal squid- largest
invertebrate, hooks on
tentacles
GIANT SQUID: up to 60ft in length,
teeth on suckers.
CUTTLEFISH: have calcified internal shell that helps
in bouyancy and gives its shape (cuttle bone)
Look like squid but have fin running along sides
CAMOUFLAGE
Chromatophores-Red, brown, yellow pigments
under skin controlled by muscles
Light reflectors under skin
Muscles able to change texture