Gastropods and Pelecypods
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Gastropods and Pelecypods. How to make a living inside your shell. Phylum Mollusca. Ancient Group of Animals Second “largest” animal phylum Over 100,000 extant species described Marine, freshwater, terrestrial (flying is the only lifestyle mollusks haven’t accomplished)
Gastropods and Pelecypods
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Gastropods and Pelecypods How to make a living inside your shell
Phylum Mollusca • Ancient Group of Animals • Second “largest” animal phylum • Over 100,000 extant species described • Marine, freshwater, terrestrial (flying is the only lifestyle mollusks haven’t accomplished) • Diversity of body forms
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bilvalvia (Pelecypoda)
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bilvalvia (Pelecypoda)
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bilvalvia (Pelecypoda)
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda • Class Polyplacophora
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda • Class Polyplacophora • Class Monoplacophora
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda • Class Polyplacophora • Class Monoplacophora • Class Scaphopoda
Phylum Mollusca • Class Gastropoda • Class Bivalvia • Class Cephalopoda • Class Polyplacophora • Class Monoplacophora • Class Scaphopoda • Class Aplacophora
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head (typically reduced) • Foot • Visceral mass
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Covers the dorsal portion of the animal • Is folded into a “skirt” to form a chamber that houses the gills, and openings for digestive, urinary, and reproductive systems • May have several functions • Secretes a calcareous shell in some forms (bivalves, most gastropods, some cephalopods, monoplacophora, polyplacophra)
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Nervous system consists of a pharygeal ring and a two nerve chords • “Closed” circulatory system • Coelom is reduced (three sections, one surrounds the heart, one the nephridia and the other the gonads) • Bilateral symmetry (may be “lost” in adult forms) • Use cilia for movement (locomotion or to move water)
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Nervous system consists of a pharygeal ring and a two nerve chords • Open circulatory system • Coelom is reduced (three sections, one surrounds the heart, one the nephridia and the other the gonads) • Bilateral symmetry (may be “lost” in adult forms) • Use cilia for movement (locomotion or to move water)
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Nervous system consists of a pharygeal ring and a two nerve chords • “Closed” circulatory system • Coelom is reduced (three sections, one surrounds the heart, one the nephridia and the other the gonads) • Bilateral symmetry (may be “lost” in adult forms) • Use cilia for movement (locomotion or to move water)
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Nervous system consists of a pharygeal ring and a two nerve chords • “Closed” circulatory system • Coelom is reduced (three sections, one surrounds the heart, one the nephridia and the other the gonads) • Bilateral symmetry (may be “lost” in adult forms) • Use cilia for movement (locomotion or to move water)
What makes a mollusc a mollusc?The molluscan “bauplan” • Body divided into three regions • Head • Foot • Visceral mass • Body has a unique “organ” the mantle • Nervous system consists of a pharygeal ring and a two nerve chords • “Closed” circulatory system • Coelom is reduced (three sections, one surrounds the heart, one the nephridia and the other the gonads) • Bilateral symmetry (may be “lost” in adult forms) • Use cilia for movement (locomotion or to move water)
Gastropods – Introduction • Snails, slugs and others • The largest group of molluscs (over 40,000 recent species described) • Large foot used for locomotion (usually) • Posses a “radula” (used to scrape food in grazing snails, highly specialized in some groups) • Shell is coiled – result of “torsion” during larval development
Gastropods – Introduction • Only mollusk group to have terrestrial forms • Many species have well developed eyes • Head often has tactile sensory appendages
Gastropods – Introduction • Only mollusk group to have terrestrial forms • Many species have well developed eyes • Gas exchange via gills (most species) or highly vascularized mantle cavity or “lung” (pulmonate snails & some terrestrial operculate snails)
Gastropods – The radula • Scraping tool used to feed • Common to all mollusks (except bivalves) • May be modified
Cone snails – ocean predators • In cone snails, the radula has been modified into “darts.” • When the snail senses prey (such as the hapless fish, above) the proboscis shoots out and one poison filled dart harpoons the prey. • The poison is a neurotoxin, that immobilizes the prey • Cone snail venom may be fatal to humans
Gastropod Video • Part 1 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6Z2XCdmEwU • Part 2 – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0lLQLAvYFI&feature=related
Bivalves - Introduction • Clams • Over 15,000 recent species • Mostly marine • Common inhabitant of deep sea thermal vents • Freshwater forms
Bivalves - Introduction • Only mollusks to lack a radula • Classified based on gill structure • Reduced head • Laterally compressed • Hatchet-shaped foot • Adapted for burrowing
Bivalves – Life History • First larval stage is a trochophore (common to all mollusks) • Morphs into veliger stage • Veliger morphs into juvenile (has same form as adult) • Juvenile grows by accretion at mantle margin
Bivalves - Anatomy • Time to look at you “clam” • Northern quahog Venus mercenaria
Bivalves - External • Two valves • Valves hinged on dorsal side • Notice the growth lines (concentric rings)
Bivalves – Shell Morphology & Physiology • Most mollusks secrete a shell • Shell is composed of calcium carbonate (same material used by corals) • Protected by periostracum • Prismatic layer (crystals oriented vertically) • Nacreous layer (crystals oriented horizontally)
Bivalves – Internal Anatomy & Physiology • Teeth – keep shells from slipping • Ligament – connective tissue that contracts when shell is opened • Adductor muscles – contract to allow the animal to “clam up” • Pallial line – attachment point for the mantle to the shell • Pallial sinus – shows position of the siphons
Bivalves – Internal Anatomy & Physiology • Mantle – surrounds the body & apressed to the shell • Contains sensory organs (tactile tentacle, light sensing eye spots • Secretes the shell • Is fused (two halves joined) dorsally, open ventrally • May be modified to form siphons
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Foot • Primary form of locomotion • Animal pushes foot into substrate • Foot is filled with blood, causing it to expand and grip substrate • Clam pulls body toward foot
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Gills (ctenidia) • Respiratory function • Secondary function is to filter water to capture food • Gill structure is used to classify bivalves
Bivalve gill evolution • Protobranchs (primitive)
Protobranchs (primitive) Filibranchs Gills fold back to form a “U”-shaped structure. Mantle cavity divided by gills into a ventral inhalent chamber and a dorsal exhalent chamber. Chambers connect to outside via siphons Gills filter food from the water passing across them. Cilia move water across the gills. Bivalve gill evolution
Bivalve gill evolution • Protobranchs (primitive) • Filibranchs • Eulamellibranchs
Bivalve gill evolution • Protobranchs (primitive) • Filibranchs • Eulamellibranchs • Septibranchia
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Digestive System • Labial palps surround oral opening • Short esophagus • Stomach • Crystalline style
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • The style – found in many mollusks • Serves several functions • “windlass” to pull food string from esophagus to stomach • Stirring rod • Source of digestive enzymes
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Digestive System • Labial palps surround oral opening • Short esophagus • Stomach • Crystalline style • Intestine (loops around stomach) • Rectum
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Circulatory System • Pericardium encloses the heart • Heart has two auricles and one ventricle • Circulatory system is open (blood passes from arteries into sinuses in the tissue and then back into veins). • Most clams have haemocyanin as the blood pigment. Some have haemoglobin.
Bivalves – Anatomy & Physiology (Under the mantle) • Urogenital System • Posses two nephridia (similar to kidneys) • Most bivalves are dioecious • Gonads are usually adjacent to the intestine • Gonads and nephridia discharge to the posterior portion of the mantle cavity