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Phylum Mollusca BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson 1 Phylum Mollusca 2 Numbers of species Arthropoda Mollusca Chordata Platyhelminthes Nematoda Annelida Porifera Echinodermata Other Sarcomastigophora Apicomplex Ciliophora 3 Molluscs • 50,000 -100,000 living species • 35,000 extinct species • Largest = 1000 pounds • 80% less than 5 cm • Soft body • Most have a shell • Most marine • Snails terrestrial – Most habitat 4 Phylum Mollusca • Ventral Foot – Locomotion • Mantle – Encloses mantle cavity • Shell • Radula • Coelom (eucoelomate) • Metanephridia • Open circulatory system 5 – Closed in cephalopods Economics • Pearls • Burrowing shipworms • Snails & slugs – Garden pests – Food – Intermediate hosts for parasites 6 Trochophore Larva • Same type as Phylum Annelida 7 Uniramia Echinodermata Chelicerata Vertebrata Lophophores Crustacea Other Chordata Arthropoda Annelida Hemichordata Other pseudocoelomates Nematoda Mesozoa Sarcomastigophora Ciliophora Apicomplexa Microspora Mollusca Nemertea Platyhelminthes Ctenophora Cnidaria Placozoa Porifera Myxozoa 8 Generalized Mollusc 9 Body Plan Pericardial cavity Metanephridium Mantle cavity Gonad Ctenidium Radula Stomach and digestive gland Foot 10 Dorsal mantle covers the visceral mass. 11 Secretes the shell 12 Ctenidium (Respiration) 13 Complete digestive system 14 Paired ventral nerve cords 15 Radula 16 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. 17 Coelom - metanephridia 18 Class Polyplacophora Chitons 19 Class Polyplacophora • Eight dorsal plates • Reduced head • Radula reinforced with iron – Scrape algae from rocks 20 Class Polyplacophora Mouth Mantle cavity Ctenidium Foot Anus 21 Class Polyplacophora Digestive gland Mouth Stomach Gonad Pericardial cavity Nephridium Anus 22 Class Bivalvia Clams, Oysters, Shipworms 23 Class Bivalvia • • • • Two shells Most are filter feeders No head or radula Burrow – Sand, wood, rocks 24 25 26 Giant Clam & Burrowing Clam Siphon 27 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 28 Zebra Mussel • Live in high densities • Feed on phytoplankton • Reproduce rapidly 29 Zebra Mussel • Attach to native mussels • Killed all native mussels in Lake Erie 30 Distribution of Zebra Mussel 31 Bivalve structures Hinge Labial palp Ctenidium Excurrent siphon Foot Incurrent siphon 32 Clam anatomy Pericardial cavity Metanephridium Heart Intestine Excurrent Stomach Incurrent Intestine Gonad 33 Clam anatomy Digestive gland Excurrent Stomach Incurrent Intestine Gonad 34 Clam anatomy Pericardial cavity Heart Intestine Excurrent Incurrent 35 Clam anatomy Metanephridium Pericardial cavity Heart Intestine Excurrent Incurrent Gonad 36 Oysters 37 Pearl formation Shell Developing pearl Epithelium Irritant lodged between shell and mantle Layers of nacre secreted around foreign material 38 Scallops 39 Shipworms 40 Class Gastropoda Snails, Slugs, Conchs, Limpets 41 Class Gastropoda • One shell (if present) • Torsion of body 42 43 Snail • Terrestrail • Mantle cavity functions as lung 44 Snail Shell Pneumostome Tentacle (Eye stalks) Tentacle Anus Foot Mouth Genital pore 45 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Internal Structure of a Generalized Gastropod 46 Nudibranch • No shell • Dorsal projections – Gills – Nematocyst discharge 47 Abalone • Several holes in top of shell – Excrete waste • Food for man 48 Slug • No shell • Garden pests 49 Limpet • Herbivores • Cling to rocks or other surfaces 50 Conch • Large shell • Marine • Many are predators 51 Class Cephalopoda Squids, Octopuses, Nautiluses 52 Class Cephalopoda • Shell in squid and octopus absent or vestigial • Jet propulsion • Ink sac • Foot modified into arms and tentacles • Marine • All predators 53 Squid Posterior surface Right Ventral Dorsal Left 54 Squid Tentacle Arm Funnel (siphon) Collar Eye Fin 55 Squid Shell (Pen) Systemic heart Branchial heart Ctenidium Funnel 56 Squid Male Testis Penis Hectocotylous arm 57 Squid Female Ovary with eggs Oviducal gland Nidamental glands Oviducal opening 58 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cephalopod Eye 59 Octopus • Eight arms with suckers • Crawl or eject water from siphon • Change skin color – chromatophores • Most intelligent invertebrate 60 Nautilus • Up to 94 tentacles – No suckers • Shell with many chambers – Lives in outermost chamber 61 Ammonoids • Extinct • Devonian to Cretaceous – 400 to 65 MYA • Died out with dinosaurs 62 Class Scaphopoda • Tooth shells • Shell opens on both ends • Burrow into mud • No gills – Mantle for gas exchange • Feed on detritus and protozoa 63 Class Scaphododa 64 The End 65