Phylum Mollusca 5 - 001
Phylum Mollusca 5 - 001
Phylum Mollusca 5 - 001
Mollusks
Most are marine, some inhabit
freshwater
More than 150,000 known species
Soft-bodied animals (from L.
molluscus, soft) but most are
protected by a hard shell made of
calcium carbonate
Some have reduced shells (slugs,
squids, and octopuses) most of which
are internal, or they have lost their
VISCERAL MASS
Coelom
Kidney
Heart
Mollusk
s
Reproductive
organs
Digestive
tract
MANTLE
Shell
Mantle
cavity
RADULA
Anus
Gill
Mouth
FOOT
Nerve
cords
All have
similar body
plan
3 main
parts
-Muscular
foot
-Visceral
VISCERAL MASS
Coelom
Kidney
Heart
Reproductive
organs
Digestive
tract
MANTLE
Shell
Mantle
cavity
RADULA
Anus
Gill
Mouth
FOOT
Nerve
cords
3 main
parts
Muscular
foot
- For
movement
Visceral
mass
- Containing
most of the
internal
organs
Mantle
-A fold of
Mollusks
In many, the mantle extends beyond
the visceral mass, producing a waterfilled chamber, the mantle cavity
Many feed by using a straplike
rasping organ called radula to scrape
up food
Have separate sexes, with gonads
(ovaries or testes) located in the
visceral mass
Snails are hermaphrodites
Gastropoda (snails,
slugs)
Bivalvia (clams,
mussels, scallops,
oysters)
Cephalalopoda
(squids, octupuses,
chambered
nautiluses)
Class Polyplacophora
Chitons
Marine animals with oval shapes
Shells divided into eight dorsal plates
Cling to rocks along the shore during
low tide
The foot acts as a suction cup, grips
the rock
Grazers that use radula to cut and
ingest algae
Class Gastropoda
The largest of the molluscan classes
Has more than 40,000 living species
Marine, but there are freshwater
species
Most distinctive characteristics:
torsion
Torsion
During embryonic
development, an
asymmetrical
muscle forms, and
contraction of the
muscle and uneven
growth causes the
visceral mass to
rotate up to 1800,
so that the anus
and mantle cavity
are places above
the head in the
Advantage is to
place the visceral
mass and heavy
shell more
centrally over the
snails body
Class Gastropoda
Class Gastropoda
In one group, the cone snails, the teeth of
the radula form separate poison darts,
which penetrate prey, including fishes
Are among the few invertebrate groups to
have successfully populated the land
Terrestrial snails lack the gills, and instead
the lining of mantle cavity functions as a
lung, exchanging respiratory gases with
the air
Class Bivalvia
Shells divided into two halves
Two parts of the shell are hinged at
the mid-dorsal line, and a powerful
adductor muscles draw the two
halves tightly together to protect the
soft-bodied animal
When the shell is open, the bivalve
may extend its hatchet-shaped foot
for digging or anchoring
Class Bivalvia
Mantle cavity
contain gills that
are used for
feeding as well as
gas exchange
Most are
suspension-feeders
No distinct head,
and the radula is
lost
Mouth
Radula
Class Cephalopoda
Are built for speed, an adaptations
that fits their carnivorous diet
Use beaklike jaws to bite their prey;
then they inject poison to immobilize
the victim
Mouth is at the center of several long
tentacles
Mantle covers the visceral mass, but
the shell is reduced and internal
(squids) or missing altogether (many
Class Cephalopoda
The only mollusks with a closed
circulatory system
Have well-developed nervous system
with a complex brain
Have well-developed sense organs
Shelled cephalopods called
ammonites, some of them as large
as truck tires, were the dominant
invertebrate predators of the seas for
hundreds of million years until their
disappearance during mass