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Phylum. Mollusca Class. Aplacophora √ Class. Polyplacophora √ Class. Monoplacophora

Phylum. Mollusca Class. Aplacophora √ Class. Polyplacophora √ Class. Monoplacophora Class. Gastropoda Class. Cephalopoda Class. Bivalvia Class. Scaphopoda. Monoplacophora. Cephalopoda. Gastropoda. Bivalvia. Scaphopoda. Polyplacophora. Aplacophora. Monoplacophora. Mouth.

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Phylum. Mollusca Class. Aplacophora √ Class. Polyplacophora √ Class. Monoplacophora

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  1. Phylum. Mollusca Class. Aplacophora √ Class. Polyplacophora √ Class. Monoplacophora Class. Gastropoda Class. Cephalopoda Class. Bivalvia Class. Scaphopoda

  2. Monoplacophora Cephalopoda Gastropoda Bivalvia Scaphopoda Polyplacophora Aplacophora

  3. Monoplacophora Mouth Nephridium Nerve cord Ctenidium Gonads Heart atria Pedal retractor muscle Anus

  4. Monoplacophora • Extant spp discovered in 1952 • Only 20 spp, all marine, deep water zones (1800-7000m). • Poorly studied • Likely ancestor of gastropods, cephalopods and bivalves, and the bivalvia and scaphopods • Monoplacophorans and Polyplacophorans evolved shells independently from a shell-less ancestor. Evidence: shells differ in internal layer structure • Superficially similar to gastropod limpets

  5. Gastropoda

  6. Gastropoda • Most diverse taxon of mollusca • Estimates range from 40,000-100,000 spp (probably 60,000 extant, 15,000 extinct spp) • Three major groups: • Prosobranchs – benthic marine spp • Opisthobranchs – secondary loss of the shell • Pulmonates – air breathers

  7. Torsion is unique to gastropods Most gastropods are dextral Pretorsion Post torsion

  8. Prosobranch Opisthobranch Pulmonata

  9. Prosobranchs • Mantle cavity anterior, due to torsion • Most common, typical “snail” • Mostly marine, some freshwater, terrestrial • Most primitive group of gastropods

  10. Opisthobranchs • Mantle cavity lateral or posterior, due to detorsion or loss of shell • ca 2000 spp. e.g. nudibranchs (sea hares, sea slugs) • Ctendia often lost. Gas exchange via cerata

  11. Pulmonata • Highly vascularized mantle for gas exchange (lung) • 17,000 spp: slugs, pond snails

  12. Gastropoda • More active than mono and polyplacophorans • Highly cephalized: tentacles, eyes • Gonochoristic (dioecious) • Veliger larva (an advanced version of the trochophore larva)

  13. Veliger larva Metanephridium Velum Shell Stomach Digestive cecum Foot Esophagus

  14. Cephalopoda

  15. Cephalopoda • Swift, agile carnivores • Closed circulatory system, 2 hearts • Separate sexes • Foot modified to form arms, tentacles, siphon • Brain, cranium, complex image-forming eye • 700 extant spp, 10,000 extinct spp • Arose from limpet-like monoplacophorans • Ergo, ventral became functional anterior, etc

  16. Cephalopoda Posterior surface Right Ventral Dorsal Left

  17. Cephalopod eye Iris Lens Retina Cornea Optic nerves

  18. eye Optic lobe Buccal ganglia Cerebral ganglion statocyst esophagus Brachial nerves Brain is surrounded by a cranium

  19. Cephalopoda • Ectocochleate cephalopods • Have external shell with internally subdivisions used for buoyancy control • This ancestral group is almost completely extinct • E.g. Nautilus

  20. Cephalopoda • Endocochleate cephalopds • Reduced internal shell, or shell absent • Squids, cuttlefish, octopi

  21. Tentacle Arm Funnel (siphon) Fin Collar Eye

  22. Shell (Pen) Systemic heart Branchial heart Ctenidium Funnel Hectocotylus (sperm-bearing arm in males) Reproduction: trochophore and veliger are bypassed and hatch into planktonic juveniles

  23. Nautilus is the only cephalopod with an external shell and lacking chromatophores Chromatophores (color cells) Iridocytes (reflective cells) • Millions of these allow rapid changes in color, polarized signals • Also have photophores for bioluminescence Cephalopods except Nautilus have ink sac

  24. Bivalvia

  25. Bivalvia (Pelecypoda) • 8000 extant spp (1300 fw, 6700 marine) • Specialized for infaunal habitat • Sessile, little cephalization • Filter feeders, using gills • 3 major groups of bivalves based on gill shape • Protobranchs (deposit feeders, most primitive) • Lammelibranchs (suspension feeders, most common) • Septibranchs (carnivores, most derived)

  26. Protobranchs • Gills for gas exchange only • Tend to live in deeper waters (>1000m)

  27. Lamellibranchs • Gills: gas exchange + filter feeding • Incurrent siphon, excurrent siphon Cut-away of gill structure Hinge Blood vessel mouth Ctenidium Excurrent siphon Foot Incurrent siphon

  28. Locomotion

  29. Glochidia glochidium Glochidia on gills Freshwater mussels

  30. Septibranch • Ctenidia lack filaments • Feed on polychaetes, crustaceans • Weird side group

  31. Scaphopoda • Shared (extinct) common ancestor with bivalves • 300-400 spp • Lack ctenidia, heart • Burrowers • Have 100-200 captacula (tentacles) with which to catch food

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