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Phylum Mollusca Class Aplacophora - Small + wormlike, primitive (no shell) Class Monoplacophora - Deep sea, cap-like shell; segmented? Class Polyplacophora - Chitons Class Gastropoda - Snails + slugs Class Bivalvia - Clams, mussels, oysters Class Cephalopoda - Octopus, squid, cuttlefish, nautilus Class Scaphopoda - Tusk shells Class Bivalvia ~20,000 species Shell of 2 valves, left + right; hinged by ligament on dorsal side - held together by adductor muscles Byssal threads (protein) anchor some to hard substrata Reduced head, no radula; most are filter-feeders No eyes on head, but can have numerous eyes on body 1 large pair of ctenidia used in filter feeding + gas exchange Large mantle cavity, often with mantle edges fused into large siphons for water intake Class Bivalvia – clams, mussels ~20,000 species Shell with 2 valves, held together by powerful adductor muscles (the meat of a scallop) Shell Labial palp, scrapes food off gills and into mouth foot Ctenidia = gills, used also in filter feeding Class Bivalvia – clams, mussels Shell with 2 valves, held together by powerful adductor muscles (the meat of a scallop) Shell Posterior adductor muscle Anterior adductor muscle foot Foot used for digging into bottom Bivalve shell: Muscle scars hinge ligament pedal retractor posterior adductor muscle umbo anterior adductor muscle pallial line serrations Muscle scars can be identified inside a bivalve shell Muscles & ligaments control the opening and closing of the bivalve shell When muscles relax, inner ligament pushes out shell opens When muscles contract, inner ligament is compressed shell closes tightly a relaxed clam opens its shell; staying shut takes energy Self-test : know the major anatomical features of a bivalve Bivalves filter-feed with their gills to mouth Cilia (tiny hairs) beat to generate water currents (like sponge choanocytes) Trap tiny particles, which are then carried to the mouth Use their ctenidia (gills) for both filter feeding & respiration - clams burrow into mud/sand; use siphon to draw in water, pass it over their gills for both oxygen and food Food particles are swept into food groove at base of W - scraped off, sorted by labial palps - passed to mouth - unsuitable particles rejected as pseudofeces food groove Foot is a thin, grooved appendage used to pour the fast-hardening liquid prottein that forms byssal threads Byssus - foot is held firmly against a hard surface (rock, other shells) - gland secretes a liquid protein that drips down foot groove - protein hardens into tough thread, sticks out of gland - foot releases from surface, then re-planted and repeat process Anatomy of the Mussel Mytilus mantle Byssal gland Byssal threads posterior adductor muscle ctenidium foot palp anterior adductor muscle is greatly reduced ctenidia are thin flaps that fill most of the shell Anatomy of the Mussel Mytilus Mussels: Dominant Spatial Competitors use fast-hardening protein to form byssal threads that glue them to rock surface Mussels cover rocks in the intertidal zone out-compete other organisms for space, unless their #’s are limited by predators Space Invaders The ability of bivalves to occupy space, reproduce in huge numbers, and efficiently filter feed has made them particularly disruptive invasive species in many ecosystems - devastatingly harmful, both ecologically and economically Dreissena (zebra mussel) – spread from Europe to Great Lakes, down Mississippi to 20 states – economic loss of >$5 billion so far Space Invaders The ability of bivalves to occupy space, reproduce in huge numbers, and efficiently filter feed has made them particularly disruptive invasive species in many ecosystems - devastatingly harmful, both ecologically and economically Dreissena – spread from Europe to Great Lakes to 20 states (zebra mussel) – economic cost: >$5 billion to date Potamocorbula – alien clams filter San Fran Bay so thoroughly, eliminated the spring phytoplankton bloom Musculista – Asian Date mussel, advancing across the globe The giant clam genus Tridacna includes the largest bivalves - may be 4 feet long, >400 pounds, 100 years old Inhabit nutrient-poor tropics: not much to filter feed on Mantle tissue is filled with zooxanthellae symbionts, same as hard corals - release fixed carbon to fuel clam growth - now endangered from over-fishing Unionids: Endangered freshwater mussels Freshwater mussels evolved “vampire larvae” called glochidia that clamp onto fish gills and drain nutrients from their host - larvae don’t get washed downstream, have plentiful food source Females show amazing adaptations to lure their host fish close enough to spray larvae into the fish’s gills glochidia - most Unionids have one fish species that acts as a host - many Unionids are now endangered as a result of human activity that disrupts freshwater ecosystems Freshwater mussels (Unionids) edge of mussel’s mantle female mussel actual prey fish Freshwater mussels mimic small fish, insects with parts of their body to lure larger, predatory fish spray vampire-larvae into big fish’s gills, where the larvae drink its blood! Glochidia larvae (220 mm) ...Glochidia are released into the fish’s face, where they clamp on to the thin gill tissue Other species produce clumps of eggs called ovisacs that mimic insect larvae - these mimic blackfly larvae clinging to rocks When a fish bites the ovisac, it ruptures, releasing glochidia into the fish’s gills Phylum Mollusca Class Aplacophora - Small + wormlike, primitive (no shell) Class Monoplacophora - Deep sea, cap-like shell; segmented? Class Polyplacophora - Chitons Class Gastropoda - Snails + slugs Class Bivalvia - Clams, mussels, oysters Class Cephalopoda - Octopus, squid, cuttlefish, nautilus Class Scaphopoda - Tusk shells Class Cephalopoda SubClass Nautiloidea (chambered shell) Subclass Coleoidea shell reduced to internal remnant Order Teuthoida - squids Order Sepioida - cuttlefish complete loss of shell Order Octopoda - octopuses Class Cephalopoda ~900 species Nautilus, squid, octopus Most intelligent invertebrates, complex eyes - Only molluscs with closed circulatory system: hunt by zooming backwards by high-speed jet propulsion - flex mantle muscles, forcing water out of siphon - Defense without a shell: inking, color + texture change - Foot divided into prehensile tentacles with flexible suckers nautilus (external shell) squid (thin, internal shell) octopus (no shell) Chambered Nautilus siphuncle Nautilus lives at >600 meters deep; comes to surface at night to hunt, catching prey with its tentacles - pumps gas into sealed chambers through tube called the siphuncle, to adjust buoyancy (floaty-ness) Order Teuthoida (squids) - elongated body with lateral (side) fins - 8 short arms + 2 long tentacles Order Teuthoida (squids) contractile arms suckers siphon ventral arms fin club of tentacle Order Teuthoida (squids) Squid Fast-moving mid-water predators shoot out 2 extra-long tentacles to snag fish, using their suckers internal shell giant squid = world’s biggest invertebrate Giant squid, Architeuthis Glow-in-the-dark squid Bioluminescence results from lightproducing bacterial symbionts - Vibrio bacteria live in a shuttered organ the squid can selectively open to emit desired amount of light - bacteria glow whenever they are at a threshold density in the light organ Euprymna scolopes Glow-in-the-dark squid Bioluminescence results from lightproducing bacterial symbionts Mid-water squid use light for countershading to hide from predators below nocturnal squid cast a shadow when there is moonlight, which predators see and attack from beneath Euprymna scolopes by opening shutters on light organ, squid releases same amount of light from ventral side as is hitting its dorsal surface no shadow visible to predators beneath them; essentially, become invisible Glow-in-the-dark squid Quorum sensing is how bacteria tell when there’s enough of them present to start glowing (or doing other things) - each cell releases a chemical signal - when enough signal builds up, all cells turn on genes required for bioluminescence - studies on this process led to breakthrough understanding of how bacteria cooperate during human infections: they wait until quorum sensing indicatesEuprymna sufficient scolopes #’s to turn on pathogenicity genes and mount an attack - led to a whole new line of research, looking for antibiotics that disrupts bacterial communication Loligo, the reef squid Order Sepioda (cuttlefish) Eye Arms Fin Tentacle most precise ability to mimic background color of any animal chromatophores - colored pigment sacs expand or contract to change color iridocytes - light reflectors in skin Order Sepioda (cuttlefish) Order Octopoda - body short & round - no fins - no internal shell - 8 similar arms - mostly benthic advanced brain with many distinct lobes ability to learn, even by observing other octopuses perform a task ~200 spp. Octopus - 8 arms - no shell - best vision - smartest invertebrate ~200 spp. buccal mass ctenidium Cross-section of arm siphon Octopus’ Compound Eye Epidermis Retina Iris Cornea most advanced compound eye of any invertebrate image-forming, much like our camera eyes sensory cells pigment cells