1 / 54

Mollusks

Learn about mollusks, a diverse group of animals with soft bodies and shells such as snails, clams, and octopi. Discover their anatomy, feeding habits, reproduction, and economic importance.

ahand
Télécharger la présentation

Mollusks

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. Mollusks Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Mollusca (means “soft”)

  2. What is a Mollusk? • Soft body with internal or external shell • Ex: snails, slugs, clams, squid, and octopi • Trochophore larva

  3. Body plan: • Foot – takes on many forms • Mantle – covers the body & secretes shell • Shell – (present in most) • Visceral mass – internal organs

  4. General Characteristics • Bilaterally symmetrical • Triploblastic

  5. General Characteristics Con’t • Open circulatory system • Exception is cephalopods have closed circularoty system • Radula usually present (tongue) • Protostomes

  6. Groups of Mollusks Three major classes of mollusks Gastropoda Bivalvia Cephalopoda

  7. Gastropods • “Stomach Foot” • Snails, Slugs, Nudibranchs, Conchs, Whelks, etc. • 35,000+ species

  8. Freshwater, Marine, or Terrestrial • Shell-less or single-shelled • Move by secreting mucous with cilia or use muscular foot

  9. Snail

  10. Slug

  11. Nudibranchs(sea slugs) Check out the nudibranch gallery at nationalgeographic

  12. Gastropod Anatomy

  13. Torsion • “twisted” body • 180 degree rotation of visceral mass • Significance: allows the snail to retract it’s head into the shell first and it’s foot last.

  14. Interesting Facts! • Land snails can lift ten times their own weight up a vertical surface (like a wall). • Largest Snail = Giant African Land Snail • Can weigh 2 pounds!

  15. Defense from Predators • Shells! • But what about poor land slugs and nudibranchs? • Land slugs are usually nocturnal • Some nudibranchs prey on cnidarians and recycle their nematocysts • Some sea hares can squirt ink to hide themselves

  16. Gastropod Feeding • Most are predators or scavengers • Radula: tongue-like organ that scrapes algae or other plant-like material

  17. Radula

  18. Some predatory gastropods have radula modified to pierce prey

  19. Gastropod Respiration • Gas exchange occurs in mantle cavity – gills or diffusion • Siphon- inhalent tube • Where water enters body

  20. Gastropod Circulation • Have open circulatory system • Blood not contained w/in vessels; instead it washes over the body tissues • Blood acts as a hydrostatic skeleton

  21. Nervous System • Nerves concentrated into large ganglia • Most ganglia located in head region • Simple or complex eyes • Osphradia- chemoreceptors that help to detect prey

  22. Excretion • Nephridium- kidneys • Ammonia = primary nitrogenous waste produced in aquatic species • Uric acid = primary nitrogenous waste produced in terrestrial species

  23. Reproduction • Can be monoecious or dioecious • Usually external fertilization where sperm and eggs released into water • Some internal fertilization in snails

  24. Snail Reproduction

  25. Economic Importance • Delicious-Escargot • Intermediate host for different parasites • Snails and slugs can be serious agricultural pests

  26. Class Bivalvia

  27. General Characteristics • Includes clams, oysters, mussels, scallops • Two shells • Hence “Bi-valvia”

  28. 30,000+ species • Marine and Freshwater • Mostly filter feeders

  29. Interesting Facts! • Largest bivalve -734 pounds and 4 long • Ocean Quahog can live to be 220 years old!

  30. Bivalve Respiration • Incurrent and Excurrent Siphons • Water enters and exits here • Gills greatly expanded and cilliated

  31. Circulation • Open Circulatory System • Blood not contained w/in vessels • Blood “washes” over body tissues by action of the beating heart

  32. Bivalve Feeding and Digestion • Filter feeders • Labial palps filter out food particles • Non-edible particles flushed out through the excurrent siphon

  33. Nervous System Con’t • Most sensory organs are located in the margin of the mantle • Have ganglia • Statocysts and Chemoreceptors

  34. Reproduction • Mostly Dioecious • Gonads located in visceral mass • External fertlization

  35. Economic Importance • Mmm Tasty! • Pearl production • Multi-billion dollar industry

  36. Class Cephalopod

  37. Cephalopods • octopi, squids, cuttlefish, and nautilus • soft-bodied , head is attached to foot • foot is divided into tentacles with sucking disks • Use jet propulsion

  38. Cephalopod Shell • Nautilius only one with external shell • Internal in squid (pen) and cuttlefish (cuttlebone) • Absent in octopi

  39. Movement • Use siphon for jet propulsion • Squeeze mantle cavity forcefully • Sometimes have external “wings” used to help steer

  40. Feeding • Active predators • Many hunt at night • Food captured by tentacles and brought to mouth • Jaws and radula used

  41. Respiration & Circulation • Closed circulatory system • 3 Hearts • Blood is contained w/in vessels • Respiration through gills • High metabolic rate

  42. Nervous System • Very large brain • Advanced, large eyes • Chemoreceptors • Chromatophores-pigment cells • Some of the smartest animals on the planet

  43. Some display bioluminescence: use ATP to light up • squid: brown or black ink

  44. Octopus(creeps on tentacles)

More Related