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CARTER Mollusks, Arthropods, and Echinoderms MOLLUSKS (phylum Mollusca)”soft-bodied” Invertebrates with soft, unsegmented bodies, often protected by a hard outer shell thin layer of tissue called a mantle that covers internal organs (mantle produces shell) most move with a muscular structure called a foot (also used for digging or catching prey); live nearly everywhere; most live in water Bilateral symmetry; internal organs; most water-dwelling have gills; many have an organ call a radula, which is a flexible ribbon of tiny teeth (scientists use the arrangement of teeth in the radula to help classify mollusks) Open circulatory system- blood not always inside vessels; heart pumps blood into a short vessel that opens into the body spaces containing organs Reproduce sexually Three major groups: gastropods, bivalves, and cephalopods. Gastropods: “stomach foot”; have a single shell (snail) or no shell (slug); found nearly everywhere; can be herbivores, carnivores, or scavengers CARTER Bivalves: “two-shelled”; do not have radula; are filter feeders (strain their food from water, like sponges); found in nearly all kinds of watery environments; oysters, mussels, clams, scallops CARTER Cephalopods: “head-footed”; feet are adapted to form tentacles around the mouth to capture food; may have an external shell (nautilus), internal shell (squid), or no shell (octopus); large eyes and excellent vision; most complex nervous system of any invertebrate (highly intelligent); all live in the ocean Understanding Check What organ in a mollusk obtains oxygen from water? How is the mollusk’s mantle related to its shell? What are the three groups of mollusks? CARTER ARTHROPODS (phylum Arthropoda)-“jointed leg” Invertebrates that have an external skeleton (exoskeleton; made of chitin), segmented bodies, and jointed attachments called appendages (wings, mouthparts, legs); open circulatory system; most reproduce sexually (male or female), have internal fertilization (inside the body); shed their exoskeletons as they grow (molting) More species of arthropods than all other animals combined! Five classes of arthropods: crustaceans, arachnids, centipedes, millipedes, and insects. Crustaceans (Crustacea) Two or three body sections; usually has three pairs of appendages for chewing (mandibles); five or more pairs of legs; two pairs of antennae most begin their lives as microscopic, swimming larvae; develop into adults by metamorphosis ( process in which an animal’s body undergoes dramatic changes in form during its life cycle) found in nearly every kind of watery environment, obtain oxygen through gills many are scavengers, others are predators, some are herbivores crabs, barnacles, shrimp CARTER Arachnids (Arachnida) have two body sections, eight legs, no antennae, breathe with book lungs or tiny tubes that lead to openings in the exoskeleton; found nearly everywhere spiders, mites, ticks, scorpions Centipedes (Chilopeda) highly segmented body; one pair of legs attached to each segment; “hundred feet”; predators CARTER Millipedes (Diplopeda) Highly segmented body; two pairs of legs on each segment; “thousand feet”; herbivores ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Understanding Check Why must arthropods molt? Insects (Insecta) Three body sections (head, thorax, abdomen), six legs, one pair of antennae, and usually one or two pairs of wings Obtain oxygen through a system of tubes (spiracles) Begin life as tiny, hard-shelled fertilized eggs, undergo either complete metamorphosis (four dramatically different stages) or gradual metamorphosis (no distinctly different larval stage) CARTER Scavengers, herbivores, or carnivores Many use camouflage as a defense; vast majority are harmless or beneficial to humans Largest class of animals! Flies, ant, mosquito Insects serve as decomposers and food Insects serve to spread pollen to plants (pollinate); they also spread disease Insects can serve as biological controls, controlling pests without using pesticides (ladybugs controlling aphids) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Understanding Check What are the three sections of an insect’s body? How are complete and gradual metamorphosis different? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ECHINODERMS (phylum Echinodermata) “spiny skinned” Radial symmetry, parts usually in multiples of five; live on ocean floor Most have spiny internal skeleton called endoskeleton CARTER Internal fluid system called a water vascular system; forces water into structures called tube feet; allow suction cups on the animal to grip rocks and other structures so that the animal can move Do not have a head, are either male or female, and fertilized eggs become larva which go through metamorphosis Some can undergo regeneration of lost body parts Sea stars (starfish), sand dollars, sea urchins