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Phylum Mollusca: stuff to know. Important morphologic features (hard parts only) Classification: Subphyla; classes; subclasses within Class Cephalopoda Molluscan phylogeny Ammonoid suture types Pelecypod genera: Pecten , Inoceramus , Gryphaea , Exogyra. Mollusca—Phylum overview.
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Phylum Mollusca:stuff to know • Important morphologic features (hard parts only) • Classification: • Subphyla; classes; subclasses within Class Cephalopoda • Molluscan phylogeny • Ammonoid suture types • Pelecypod genera: • Pecten, Inoceramus, Gryphaea, Exogyra
Mollusca—Phylum overview • Representatives include: snails, slugs, mussels, oysters, clams, squids, octopuses • Size ranges from microscopic (snails) up to 18m (giant squids) • Inhabit marine, freshwater and terrestrial environments • Aquatic types may be benthonic, planktonic, nektonic, even flying (squids)
Phylum overview (cont.) • Mollusks are extremely diverse, so there are few features common to all representatives • Free-living metazoans • Dorsal calcareous exoskeleton • Muscular foot for locomotion • Visceral mass with major organ systems • Mantle cavity with gills (digestive and reproductive systems open into mantle cavity) • Radula (rasping structure in mouth) • Head with mouth (maybe also tentacles and eyes) • Mantle (tissue layer) that surrounds soft parts and secretes shell
“typical” mollusk radula
Phylum overview (cont.) • Phylum originated in Early Cambrian (earlier?) from a flatworm ancestor • All major classes and subclasses originated by Middle Ordovician • Only one major class has become extinct (Rostroconchia) • Shells: • mostly univalved or bivalved, aragonitic, multilayered, with growth lines and muscle scars
Monoplacophorans • Cap-shaped to helical shell; bilateral symmetry; soft parts not twisted; paired muscles; apex of shell points anteriorly and overhangs head • Important because ancestral to most other mollusks • Only group of organisms to be described hypothetically before being discovered, AND to be known as fossils before live specimens were found
Monoplacophorans Bellerophon
Monoplacophorans • Most important group is bellerophontids • Cambrian-Early Triassic • Resemble gastropods • Very common in Late Permian of Tethyan region (e.g., “Bellerophon Limestone”)
Gastropods • Characterized by torsion of soft anatomy • Head and foot regions combined or closely associated • External shell usually coiled in a corkscrew helix
Gastropod shell terminology • Apex (earliest part) • Aperture (opening for head-foot) • Operculum (cap) • Whorl (coil of 360°) • Suture (contact between adjoining whorls) • Siphonal canal (opening for inhalent siphon)
Cephalopods • Class includes Nautilus, squids, octopuses, extinct ammonoids • Highly evolved nervous system (cephalization; eyes) • Carnivorous and capable of swimming (nektonic) (up to 70 km/hour) • Foot and head closely associated (indistinguishable in some)—hence the name: kephalus + poda • Possess hyponome (funnel for jet propulsion) and arms or tentacles
Cephalopods • Shelled forms possess gas-filled chambers • Buoyancy is controlled by (1) poise adaptation of the shell (shell form) and (2) adding or subtracting fluid from chambers by the siphuncle • Most living forms possess an ink sac • Exclusively marine
Cephalopod shell morphology • Chambered shell is divided into living chamber and phragmocone • Chambers separated by septa • Suture is junction of septum with the outer shell wall • Siphuncle = tube with blood vessels, nerves and mantle that extends from animal back through phragmocone (usually ventral) • Septal foramen = hole through which siphuncle passes • Septal neck = projection of septum surrounding siphuncle
Cephalopod sutures • If suture is fluted, saddles point toward aperture and lobes point toward apex • Orthoceratitic = unfluted or with broadly undulating lobes and saddles (Cambrian-Holocene) • Goniatitic = distinct lobes and saddles that are undivided (mostly Devonian-Triassic) • Ceratitic = smooth saddles; serrated (“saw-tooth”) lobes (mostly Triassic) • Ammonitic = serrated saddles and lobes (mostly Jurassic-Cretaceous)
Cephalopod sutures saddles lobes
Cephalopodsuturepatterns orthoceratitic gonitaitic ceratitic ammonitic
Subclass Coleoidea: belemnites Squid-like organism; typically, the only preserved part is the guard (= “fossil cigars”)
Rostroconchs and Scaphopods • Relatively uncommon • Rostroconchs = strange, bivalved mollusks (superficially resemble pelecypods) (Cambrian-Permian) • Scaphopods = “tooth shells” (Ordovician-Holocene) water sediment
Pelecypods • Clams, scallops, mussels, oysters, rudists • Soft anatomy lacks a head region; no significant sensory organs or radula • Mostly infaunal or attached epifaunalsuspension feeders; some infaunal deposit feeders • Typical shell is bilaterally symmetrical, with right and left valves closed by adductor muscles • Shells held together along hinge; line of junction of two valves is commissure
Pelecypods • Exclusively aquatic; both marine and non-marine • Marine forms range from intertidal zone to abyssal depths • Mostly aragonitic; but oysters are calcitic • Bizarre variants lack bilateral symmetry (oysters, rudists)
Pelecypod shell morphology beak hinge commissure
Pelecypod internal shell morphology hinge with articulating teeth adductor muscle scar
Bizarre pelecypods Oyster (yum-yum; pearls, too!) Rudists (extinct; up to 2m)