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Chapter 35 Section 35.1 Video  Means “soft body”  Most marine, some freshwater, a few terrestrial  Body divided into 2 main section: headfoot & visceral mass:  Head-foot: head (mouth, sensory structures) and foot (locomotion)  Visceral mass: heart & digestive, excretion, and reproductive organs  Covered by the mantle  Mantle: layer of epidermis that excretes a hard shell of calcium carbonate  Mantle cavity: space between mantle and visceral mass that protects the gills  Ganglia: clustered nerve cells that control locomotion & feeding  Radula: flexible, tongue-like strip of tissue covered with abrasive teeth 1. 2. 3. Class Gastropoda Class Cephalopoda Class Bivalvia  Examples: clams, oysters, mussels, scallops  All have a two part shell connected by hinge closed by adductor muscles  aged by shell rings  sedintary  filter feeders Video 2   siphons at the posterior end: Incurrent siphon = intake of water & food Excurrent siphon = output of water & wastes  Clams dig in the soil so only their siphons stick out  Filters about 3 quarts an hour! Video Video  Calcium carbonate secretion around a foreign object Protection of the soft visceral mass  Made by the mantle (just like the shell)   ----------- protective outer layer   /////////////  ----------- prismatic layer pearly layer (Snails, nudibranchs, cowries, whelks)  Largest and most diverse group of mollusks  Examples: snails, abalones, conchs, slugs  Locomotion: wavelike muscular contractions on mucus slime trail  Can withdraw head into mantle cavity when threatened Video  Hemolymph:  Hemocoel:  circulatory fluid fluid filled spaces A.k.a. blood cavity tentacles- sense touch & have eyes on ends  respire with gills (aquatic) or exposed blood vessels (terrestrial) by diffusion  we eat muscular foot “escargot”   Examples: octopuses, squids, cuttlefishes, chambered nautiluses  Marine animals, free swimming  Meaning “head-foot”  Tentacles have large suction cups  Largest invertebrate brain  Highly advanced eyes similar to humans  Closed circulatory system  Many release dark, inky fluid when alarmed  Many have pigment cells called chromatophores for camouflage Video Squid, chambered nautilus, cuttlefish, octopus Video He Was Shellfish Body parts you MUST identify & show me during the lab:           Umbo Valves (shells) Mantle Gills Incurrent & excurrent siphons Palps & mouth Digestive gland Intestine Gonads Heart clam  Oldest part DORSAL ANTERIOR POSTERIOR VENTRAL Section 35.2  “Few  bristles” Few setae and no parapodia  Live in soil or freshwater  Example: earthworms  Divided into over 100 segments  Movement:      Anchor middle segments with setae Contract muscles in front Elongation of anterior Setae of anterior grip ground Pull posterior forward  Ingest soil as they burrow  Digestion path: mouth  esophagus  crop (temp. storage)  gizzard (releases & breaks up organic matter)  long intestine (absorption of nutrients)  anus  Closed circulatory system  Ventral (toward posterior) & dorsal (toward anterior) vessels  Aortic arches link ventral and dorsal vessels  Respiration: diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide via moist skin  Secretion of mucus to keep moist  Excretion: via nephridia (excretory tubules in every segment except first three)  Chain of ganglia connected by a ventral nerve cord  Each segment has a single ganglia  Brain = fused ganglia  Simple sensory skills     Light Touch Chemicals temperature  Hermaphrodites  Cannot fertilize own self  Mating: press ventral surfaces together, anterior ends pointed opposite directions       Setae hold worms together Mucus secretion from clitellum Each worm injects sperm into mucus Sperm going into seminal receptacles of other worm Several days later chitin tube forms picking up eggs & stored sperm  fertilization Young worms develop inside tube and hatch 2-3  Examples: earthworms, leeches  Annelid means “Little rings”  Segmentation allows for division of labor  Bilateral symmetry  Live in freshwater, marine water, and terrestrial environments  Setae: external bristles  Parapodia: fleshy protrusions on outside of body  Number of setae and parapodia divides this phylum into three class: 1. 2. 3. Class Polychaeta Class Hirudinea Class Oligochaeta  “Many  bristles” Number of setae and parapodia  Have anetennae & specialized mouth parts  Most are marine animals  Trochophore larvae  Predatory  Largest class of annelids Video  Smallest class of annelids  Example: leeches  Live in calm freshwater & moist vegetation  No setae or parapodia  Most are carnivores & some are parasitic   Secrete anaestheic & anticlotting factors Ingest 10 times it own weight in blood!  Decomposers of leaves and organic matter  Recycle nutrients  Release natural fertilizers (waste)  Aerates the soil  Front of Card: Phylum name  Class name  Image of animal  Common name of animal   Back of Card: Symmetry  Mobility  Feeding  Reproduction  Defense  Habitat