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Phylum Mollusca. Biology 112. Mollusks. Snails, slugs, clams, octopus??? Do diverse, yet the same phylum??? Most mollusks have soft bodies and some type of protective shell 3 classes: Class Gastropoda – snails and slugs Class Pelecypoda – bivalves Class Cephalopoda – squid and octopus.
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Phylum Mollusca Biology 112
Mollusks • Snails, slugs, clams, octopus??? • Do diverse, yet the same phylum??? • Most mollusks have soft bodies and some type of protective shell • 3 classes: • Class Gastropoda – snails and slugs • Class Pelecypoda – bivalves • Class Cephalopoda – squid and octopus
Class Gastropoda: snails and slugs • Largest mollusk group • 35,000 species • Aquatic (marine and fresh), and the only terrestrial gastropods are snails and slugs • Aquatic species have gills for gas exchange. They absorb oxygen from the water and release carbon dioxide into it. • Terrestrial species do not have gills. Instead, they have evolved a simple lung where gases diffuse between the air and the blood. • Variety of feeding habits; plants, meat, dead organisms, and a few are parasites. • Bilateral symmetry • Has a feeding device called a radula that has hard, toothlike projections that acts like a file scraping food from surfaces. • Travels on a large muscular foot that secretes mucus from glands that help aid in mvmt.
Circulation in Mollusks • Different from annelids (which has a closed circulatory system – blood contained in vessels) • Mollusks have an open circulatory system in which blood is not confined to vessels after leaving the heart. A two chambered heart pumps blood into the around the coelom. • Mollusk blood has an oxygen carrying molecule like hemoglobin, called hemocyanin – although it is blue in color, not red.
Class Pelecypoda: Bivalves • Oysters, clams, scallops and mussels • Mollusks with two shells or valves; therefore called bivalves. • The two valves are hinged so they can open or close through the action of several large muscles • When closed they serve as protection from predators.
Class Cephalopoda • Squid and octopus • Most highly specialized mollusks • Have a well developed nervous system with a large brain and complex sensory organs. • In cephalopods, the foot has evolved into long arms that project from the head. The arms are equipped with suction disks. These are used to grasp prey and pull food toward the mouth. • They are all carnivorous • The mouth of cephalopods has a pair of hard, beaklike teeth used for biting and tearing prey. • They are active movers • Only mollusks with a closed circulatory system
Arthropods • Make up about 80% of the known animal species • Insects are by far the most common species of arthropods • Subdivided into two subphyla: the chelicerates and the mandibulates. • Cherlicerates: spiders, ticks • Mandibulates: crayfish, centipedes, millipedes, insects
General Arthropod Characteristics: • Most prominent characeristic is their outside skeleton, or exoskeleton. • Exoskeleton provides support, protection and attachment site for muscles. Made of chitin (strong, flexible, polysaccharide) • All arthropods molt, or shed their exoskeletons periodically. After it molts, it grows before the new skeleton hardens. • Have joints between body sections • Have jointed appendages (a structure such as a leg that grows out from the main part of the body) • Have segmented bodies
Characteristics cont… • Cephalization is more prominent than in annelids (brain and complex sense organs in the head region) • Special organs sense touch, vibration, and chemicals. The eyes of many arthropods are particularly specialized. • Open circulatory system. The dorsal heart pumps blood from the posterior end of the animal to the anterior end.
Subphyla Chelicera The body of chelicerates has two major parts. 1. The cephalothorax is a fused section composed of the head and any body segments that have legs attached. 2. The abdomen consists of posterior segments that contain most of the internal organs. The chelicerates include the class arachnida (spiders) and other chelicerates include mites and ticks.
Subphyla Mandibulata: • Unlike chelicerates, mandibulates have - mandibles, or jaws, for chewing food. • All mandibulates have antennae – segmented sense organs on the head • They have three or more pairs of walking legs • There are 4 major classes of mandibulates: • The crustaceans (crab, lobster, and **crayfish**) • The diplopods or (millipedes) • The chilopods or (centipedes) • Insecta
Crayfish dissection on Friday! The Crustaceans:
Assignment • Complete worksheet on molluscs and arthropods reading information from your textbook. • Pick up crayfish dissection worksheet to review before tomorrow’s class!