Phylum Mollusca. Mollusks 100,000 species “soft bodied animals” Eumatazoans, bilaterally symmetrical, triploblastic coelomates Mostly marine, some freshwater,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Phylum: Mollusca Mollusks are soft-bodied animals that usually have an internal or external shell.
Advertisements

PHYLUM MOLLUSCA (Molle= soft body)
Mollusks.
Ch. 35 – Mollusks & Annelids
clams, snails, slugs, and octopuses
MOLLUSKS: Section 27 – 1 Section 27 – 1 Slugs, snails, and animal that once lived in shells in the ocean or on the beach. Slugs, snails, and animal that.
Phylum Mollusca.
Tough Softies!.  Kingdom: Animalia ◦ Phylum: Mollusca (Mollusks)  Class: Bivalvia (Bivalves)  Class: Cephalopoda (Cephalopods)  Class: Gastroboda.
Section 3: Mollusks Mollusks are coelomates with a muscular foot, a mantle, and a digestive tract with two openings. K What I Know W What I Want to Find.
Stop 6: Phylum mollusca.
Phylum Mollusca. Introduction Mollusk – slugs, snails, octopus, squid, clam, oyster 50,000 living mollusk species and about 35,000 fossil species. The.
King of Camouflage – Nova
Phylum Mollusca the “mollusks”.
Chapter 27 Mollusks and Segmented Worms
MOLLUSKS: Slugs, snails, and animal that once lived in shells in the ocean or on the beach. Slugs, snails, and animal that once lived in shells in the.
Mollusks Biology Jones.
Chapter 23 Invertebrate Diversity Section 1 –Diverse animals share several key characteristics Section 2 –Sponges are relatively simple animals with porous.
Mollusks Section Soft-bodied Animals Snails, slugs, oysters, clams, scallops, octopuses, squid A larval stage called a trochophore Second largest.
Invertebrate Diversity
Phylum: Mollusca Gastropods, Bivalves & Cephalopods.
Clams, Oysters, etc. Team Awesome. General Characteristics Most are marine, some freshwater, some land (some snails and slugs) Basic characteristics of.
Mighty. Scraping teeth Body of Mollusc Molluscs The life cycle of many marine mollusks includes a ciliated larvae, the ____trochophore___________.
Chitons, Snails, Clams, Squids, etc.
Phylum Mollusca November 3-4, 2014.
Mollusks. Zebra Mussels Invaded Great Lakes- came from Great Britain Reproduce quickly-one female releases 40,000 Cause problems-clog intake pipes- Competition.
CLAMS,SQUIDS, OCTOPUSES, SNAILS, SLUGS, ETC.
PHYLUM MOLLUSCA Mollusks Mollusks (Mollusca) –extremely diverse –characterized by a coelom great economic significance –pearls –mother of pearl economic.
Phylum: Mollusca Class: Polyplacophora Class: Bivalvia
Phylum Mollusca Ex: Chitons, Snails, Clams, Octopods, and Squid.
Phylum Mollusca Unit 4.
37-1 Mollusks · Invertebrates like clams, snails, slugs and octopuses
MOLLUSCA. Characteristics Class Gastropoda – snails, slugs Class Gastropoda – snails, slugs Class Cephalopoda – octopus, squid, nautilus Class Cephalopoda.
Unsegmented soft body Mollusks have 3 main parts -visceral mass, modified foot, & mantle Mollusks have a visceral mass (contains the organs) Mollusks.
Phylum Molluska 3 Main Classes of Mollusks GASTROPODA : includes limpets, snails, slugs and whelks BIVALVIA: includes clams, oysters, muscles,
Phylum Mollusca Soft – bodied invertebrates Clams, Octopus, Snails.
Ch. 27 Phylum Mollusca Soft bodies Soft bodies Internal or external shell Internal or external shell Body Plan w/ 4 parts: Body Plan w/ 4 parts: Foot Foot.
Phylum: Mollusca Gastropods, Bivalves & Cephalopods.
Mollusks Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Mollusca (means “soft”)
Snails, Clams, Mussels, Squid, and Octopi
Mollusk Characteristics Unsegmented soft body Mollusks have 3 main parts Visceral mass: contains the internal organs Modified Foot: –Muscular foot and/or.
Phylum Mollusca Examples: Snails, slugs, squid, clams, octopus, and scallops.
Mollusks. Mollusks  Include the following  Snails, slugs, oysters, clams, scallops, octopi, and squid  Second larges phylum in animal kingdom  More.
Phylum Mollusk Snails, Clams, Squids, etc.. Trochophore Larvae – the stage of organism after gametes have been fertilized.
Introduction Clam Oyster Snail Octopus Squid Write down as many facts as you can about these five animals Write a sentence at the bottom of the page telling.
Chapter 27: Mollusks. I. Taxonomy Kingdom: Animalia – Phylum: Mollusca (soft)
Phylum Mollusca Class Bivalvia Class Gastropoda Class Cephalopoda
WARM UP 1.List seven characteristics of roundworms.
Phylum Mollusca.
Mollusks. Phylum Mollusca Includes snails and slugs, oysters and clams, and octopuses and squids. BivalvesNautilus.
Prepared by : Nada H. Lubbad
Phylum Mollusca.
Phylum Molluska Ms. Martel.
Phylum Molluska C-27-4.
Introduction to Molluscs
Phylum Mollusca.
Mollusca Soft bodied animals.
Mollusks.
Phylum Molluska Over 50,000 species
Biology 11 Kingdom Animalia
Mollusks.
Phylum Mollusca species 2nd only to Phylum Arthropoda
Soft-bodied Animals More than 112,000 species
Phylum Mollusca Lecture 10.
Phylum Molluska C-27-4.
Phylum Mollusca “Soft Body”.
Zoology Rainier Jr/Sr High School Mr. Taylor
Soft – bodied invertebrates Clams, Octopus, Snails
Ch. 37 – Mollusks & Annelids
Gastropods, Bivalves & Cephalopods
TSW identify and describe the basic characteristics of mollusks
Presentation transcript:

Phylum Mollusca

Mollusks 100,000 species “soft bodied animals” Eumatazoans, bilaterally symmetrical, triploblastic coelomates Mostly marine, some freshwater, some terrestrial Size: microscopic snails to giant squids (largest invertebrate) Diverse group with varied appearances but similar body plans: Diverse ◦ Foot ◦ Visceral mass ◦ Mantle  Mantle cavity ◦ Shell ◦ Radula ◦ Siphon(s) Body systems

Characteristics Visceral Mass - contains the organs ◦ the “soft bodied” part Mantle – fold of tissue that drapes over the visceral mass makes shell in most organisms Internal or external Mantle cavity – water-filled chamber ◦ Contains gills, anus, and excretory pores Foot - muscular lower part used for movement Radula – sharp, tongue-like structure Head area is clearly defined ◦ contains the brain and sense organs

SYSTEMS Digestive – Complete gut Muscle – foot (for locomotion) Nervous (brain & nerve cords) ◦ Complex senses  Eye spots (light)  Chemical sensors/touch sensors (tentacles) Circulatory ◦ Blood vessels deliver oxygenated blood around the body (open system – blood mixes in coelom) ◦ Pumped by heart Respiratory – gills (aquatic)/lungs (on land) ◦ Siphons (move/pump water) ◦ Filter water Reproductive ◦ Ciliated larval stage (trochophore)

Nervous system and sense structures Gastropods: eye spots (on stalks at base of tentacles or on tentacles) and chemical sensors in tentacles Bivalves: photoreceptor and vibration cells Cephalopods: Best developed brain of all invertebrates- can detect light, vibrations, chemicals *Eye of snail* *Suckers on octopus tentacles*

Basic Body Plan

Shell vs. No Shell

Classes Class Aplacophora species ◦ Exclusively marine ◦ Burrowers ◦ No shell Class Bivalvia (clams, mussels, scallops, & oysters) Class Cephalopoda (squids & octopuses) Class Gastropoda (slugs & snails) Class Monoplacophora – 11 species ◦ Discovered in 1952 ◦ Many repeated organs (like annelids) ◦ Single shell Class Polyplacophora (chitons) Class Scaphopoda

900 species Tusk shell Burrow on sea floor sediments Shell opened at both ends

Class Polyplacophora 600 species of Chitons Entirely marine species ◦ Inhabit rocky ocean bottoms and coastlines No head Oval body divided into 8 dorsal plates ◦ Body is unsegmented Foot used for movement and suction Feeds on algae

Class Gastropoda 3/4 th of all living species of mollusks “stomach-foot” Slugs and snails (move over slimy film) Slugs Marine, freshwater, and terrestrial Asymmetrical body plan Defined head with eyes and tentacles Usually have a single coiled shell ◦ Defense/safety ◦ Can be reduced or absent Open circulatory system Torsion: visceral mass rotates 180° causing the mantle cavity to be above its head (sea snails) Host to many parasites (zombie snails)zombie snails Eat algae & plants, or hunters (cone snail)cone snail ◦ Specialized radula

Sea snail Snail Slug Sea Slug

Class Bivalvia 15,000 species “2 door ways” Clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops Clamsscallops No distinct head, no radula Have two shells ◦ Attached at a hinge (by ligament) ◦ Adductor muscles open/close shells Gills in mantle cavity for respiration an ◦ Incurrent siphon – water in ◦ Excurrent siphon – water out Typically sessile suspension feeders (mussels have attaching threads) ◦ Can move with foot (clams) or “flapping” (scallops)scallops Some have eyes and sensory tentacles extending from mantle Reproduce through spawning (releasing sperm and egg) ◦ Seasonal

Oysters Mussels Scallops Clams

Bivalve Anatomy

Class Cephalopoda 700 species Octopi, squids, cuddle fish, chambered nautiluses Active, marine predators ◦ Beak like jaws (modified or absent radula) ◦ Some poisonous “head foot” Head (clearly defined) surrounded by grasping tentacles ◦ Modified foot ◦ Usually has suckers Shell can be internal (squids), external (chambered nautilus), or absent (octopi) Locomotion by jet propulsion (siphon) Only mollusk with a closed circulatory system Complex brain and sensory equipment (complex eyes)/nervous system (octopi – smartest invertebrate)octopi Chromatophores → color changing skin

OCTOPUS 8 tentacles ◦ Complete with suckers Intelligent hunters Intelligenthunters Can fit into tiny spaces ◦ No shell Masters of disguise Reproduction “intimate” and dangerous – male sometimes eaten Solitary and aggressive towards other members of their species Would you eat one?

Beak is surrounded by tentacles ◦ Sharp for tearing into prey (crabs, small fish, etc.)crabs Ink sack for defense against predators 3 hearts (2 for pumping blood through gills, 1 for pumping blood through body)

SQUID Internal shell Predators (squid feeding)feeding ◦ Beak ◦ Feeding tentacles Vampire squid Giant squid

CUDDLEFISH Excellent at camouflage ◦ Can change the color and texture of skin

CHAMBERED NAUTILUS CHAMBERED NAUTILUS Most primitive cephalopod Approx. 90 tentacles ◦ No suckers Grows shell in chambers Coloration helps avoid predators Eye has no lens Hunts with chemical sensors Hunts