1 / 49

Class Gastropoda

Class Gastropoda. Snails - largest class of molluscs ~ 85,000 living spp. ~ 15,000 fossil spp. Habitats: marine benthos, ocean plankton, freshwater, land. After torsion. Gastropod characteristics. 1. Torsion - primitive bilateral symmetry lost during development

lave
Télécharger la présentation

Class Gastropoda

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Class Gastropoda • Snails - largest class of molluscs • ~ 85,000 living spp. • ~ 15,000 fossil spp. • Habitats: marine benthos, ocean plankton, freshwater, land

  2. After torsion Gastropod characteristics • 1. Torsion - primitive bilateral symmetry lost during development • Twisting of visceral mass, mantle, and mantle cavity

  3. Gastropod characteristics • 2. Definite head: eyes, tentacles • 3. Flat ventral foot • 4. Mantle cavity w/gills or lungs • 5. Buccal cavity w/ radula

  4. plano-spiral helico-spiral Characters cont. • 6. Coiled shell - one continuous piece • operculum on posterior foot of some

  5. Characters, cont. • 7. Centralized complex nervous system • 8. Hermaphroditic or dioecious • 9. Oviparous or ovoviparous

  6. 10. Larval form • Archaeogastropoda have trochophore larva • Many marine snails have veliger larva • Freshwater + terrestrial species usually hatch as young snails

  7. Gastropod classification • 3 subclasses: • Prosobranchia • Opisthobranchi - reduced shell • Pulmonata - lungs

  8. Subclass Prosobranchia • Mantle cavity anterior • 1 or 2 gills • shell and operculum usually present • most are dioecious

  9. Prosobranchs, Order Archaeogastropoda • Primitive snails • External fertilization • Trochophore larva • 2 bipectinate gills • 2 auricles • 2 coelomoducts

  10. Prosobranchs, Order Archaeogastropoda • A. slit shells - deep water species • Abalones (Haliotis) • 9 spp on our Pacific coast • Commercially harvested

  11. Prosobranchs, Order Archaeogastropoda • B. keyhole limpets - Fissurella • conical shells • C. Limpets - Acmaea

  12. Prosobranchs, Order Archaeogastropoda • D. topshells, turban shells, star shells • Astraea

  13. Prosobranchs, Order Archaeogastropoda • E. Nerites (Nerita) intertidal in Caribbean • some freshwater + terrestrial

  14. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • Male with penis • Fertilization internal • 1 monopectinate gill • 1 auricle • 1 coeloduct

  15. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • A. Freshwater apple snails - • Viviparus, Pomacea

  16. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • B. Turret shells - worm shells; caecums, ceriths, some freshwater genera, all have high shells

  17. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • C. Violet snails - pelagic grazers on man o’war • Vellela, Porpita • Janthina: secretes bubble mass for floatation

  18. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • D. Cap shells, slipper shells • Crepidula change sex w/age • see slides of veliger larva

  19. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • E. Conchs - Strombus • Feed on algae, turtlegrass • Commercial harvest in Caribbean

  20. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • F. Cowries; Cypraea - graze on algae, sponges, gorgonians, and tunicates • Mantle covers most of shell when extended • Favorites of shell-collectors • No periostracum • Italians call them “porcellanos” = little pigs • Porcelain got its name

  21. Cowries

  22. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • G. Heteropods - pelagic, swimming snails w/reduced shell • Carinaria (see Fig. 10-30, p. 399)

  23. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • H. Moon shells - predators on molluscs: • bore into shells • Lunatia • Polinices

  24. Moon shells: • Muscular suction disk holds snail on clam shell • Drill through shell with radula: • Wiggle proboscis into flesh • Remove most of flesh from clam

  25. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • I. Helmet shells, tritons, tuns • Predators on molluscs and echinoderms • Long proboscis • Large shells

  26. Prosobranchs, Order Mesogastropoda • J. Periwinkles - intertidal • Littorina

  27. Prosobranchs, Order Neogastropoda • Mostly same characteristics as Mesogastropoda • Radula has only 3 teeth in a transverse row • Most are marine • Most are carnivores

  28. Prosobranchs, Order Neogastropoda • A. Drills - Murex, Urosalpinx • Drill holes in shells of bivalves and barnacles • Oyster drill and others cause economic losses

  29. Prosobranchs, Order Neogastropoda • B. Whelks - Busycon • Tulip shells - Fasciolaria • Predators and carrion feeders

  30. Prosobranchs, Order Neogastropoda • C. Olives, miters, and volutes • Colorful, mostly tropical snails • prey on invertebrates

  31. Prosobranchs, Order Neogastropoda • D. Cones - Conus • Most prey on inverts • Those that prey on fish can be dangerous to humans • Fig 10-42, p. 409

  32. Conus • Long proboscis with harpoon-like radular tooth • venom gland

  33. “Glory of the sea” cone shell

  34. Subclass Opisthobranchia • Detorsion - brings mantle cavity to right side • 1 gill, 1 auricle, 1 coelomoduct • Shell often reduced or absent • Mantle cavity often reduced or absent • Many are secondarily bilateral symmetric • Hermaphroditic

  35. Subclass Opisthobranchia • A. Bubble shells - Bulla • Predators with thin, reduced shell

  36. Subclass Opisthobranchia • B. Sea hares - Aplysia • Thin, caplike shell overgrown by mantle • Vegetarians (herbivores) • Can eject milky fluid from mantle cavity • A. californica has largest body of all gastropods

  37. Subclass Opisthobranchia • C. Sea slugs • With or w/o shell • Berthelinia is a “bivalve” gastropod • Fig. 10-23, p. 392

  38. Subclass Opisthobranchia • D. Pteropods or sea butterflies • 2 orders with and w/o (naked) shells • Planktonic with foot modified into wing-like flaps for swimming • Often occur in enormous numbers

  39. More Pteropods

  40. Subclass Opisthobranchia • E. Nudibranchs • Often with secondary gills and cerata (hornlike dorsal projections) • Many endemics

  41. Subclass Opisthobranchia • F. Parasitic Opisthobranchs • 2 orders • One ectoparisitic on bivalves and annelids • One endoparasitic in sea cucumbers

  42. Subclass Pulmonata • Charactistics like Opisthobranchia, but w/o gill • Mantle cavity converted to lung • Shell usually present • No operculum • Hermaphroditic

  43. Subclass Pulmonata • A. freshwater snails: • Lymnaea, Physa, Planorbis • Freshwater limpets • Most come to surface for air • Some have developed secondary gills • Descended from terrestrial ancestors

  44. Subclass Pulmonata • B. Land snails and slugs • Helix • Limax • C. Intertidal slugs w/posterior anus

  45. Class Scaphopodatusk shells • ~ 300 spp. • Sedentary, marine burrowing, in 6 - 1800 m depth • Shells resemble elephant tusks • Most burrow in sand, few in mud • Feed on microscopic organisms; foraminiferans • Considered offshoot of early bivalve ancestors

  46. Scaphopod characteristics • 1. Tusk-like shell open at both ends • 2. Bilateral symmetry (like bivalves) • 3. Rudimentary head • no eyes • Head has threadlike, food gathering tentacles (captacula)

  47. Foot

  48. Scaphopod characteristics • 4. Radula present • 5. Circulatory system reduced - sinuses • Gills absent • 6. Dioecious, trochophore and veliger larval stages

  49. Scaphopod classification • Two families (representative species): • Dentalium - conical shell • Cadulus + Siphonodentalium - globular shell, enlarged foot

More Related