Mollusca
Mollusca
Mollusca
Sc
Scaphopoda
Includes animals such as squids, snails, oysters, clams and slugs. Most are marine, but many are freshwater and some live on the land
Despite the diversity of form and function among the mollusca, all members of this group have the same basic body plan. This is often indicated by presenting a hypothetical ancestral Molusca (HAM] HAM is hypothetical primitive ancestor that has characteristics that appear among most members of the mollusca
The foot - a broad, flat muscular organ that is adapted for locomotion and attachment The visceral mass - contains the internal organs The mantle - a fold of tissue that drapes over the visceral mass; space between the mantle and the visceral mass is called the mantle cavity
Wide variety of forms but all built around the same basic plan: foot, shell, gut, gill, mantle cavity.
Characteristic
Characteristic
Radula
Aplacophora
Absent in 20% of Neomeniomorpha Reduced or absent
Polyplacophora
Yes
Monoplacophora
Yes
Gastropoda
Yes
Cephalopoda
Yes
Bivalvia
Scaphopoda
Internal, cannot extend beyond body Small, only at front end Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Not obvious
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Small, simple
Wide variety of shapes : Reduced shells (sea hares, squid pen, cuttle bone). Lost shells (octopus, nudibranchs)
Molusca shells
Upper :Sea hares have reduced shell Bottom : Sea slug have no shell
THE FOOT
Consists of a muscular foot, which has adapted to different purposes in different classes. In gastropods, it secretes mucus as a lubricant to aid movement. In bivalves, the foot is adapted for burrowing into the sediment; In cephalopods it is used for jet propulsion, and the tentacles and arms are derived from the foot.
Direct and indirect waves. Mucus alternately acts as a glue and allows sliding. Some gastropods use cilia (moon snails).
Bivalves : Burrowing
Byssal threads
Byssal threads
Cephalopods
Radial and circular muscles. Contraction of circular muscles forces water out siphon or funnel for swimming. Crawling along substratum
Feeding system
The ancestral mollusk was a microphagous herbivore that fed on algae diatoms growing on rocks in tidal pools and shallow water. Radula apparatus have a very important role on feeding and digestive system.
The radula apparatus contains ofan elongated cartilaginous base, the odontophore.
The radula function as a scraper (mencakar) The odontophore function is extended from the mouth against the substratum and then retracted. Since the radula teeth recurve posteriorly, the effective scraping stroke is forward when the odontophore is retracted (dicabut). In this way, algae and other particles are scraped away from the surface of the rock.
Food in mucous string passes from the buccal cavity in to a tubular esophagus from which it is moved posteriorly toward the stomach a long a ciliated tract. The stomach is shaped like an ice cream cone, with esophagus opens, and a tapered (lonjong) posterior which leads into inestine. The posterior conical region of the stomach, called the style sac.
Bucal cavity
The acidity of the stomach fluid (pH of 5 to 6 in living mollusks) decrease the viscosity of the mucus and aids in freeing the contained particles.(mengurai partikel makanan). Lighter and finer particles are driven by the cilia of the ridges to the duct openings of the two digestive gland. Heavier and larger particles are carried in the grooves between the ridges to the large groove running a long the floor of the stomach to the intestine.
Particles utilized as food pass into the ducts of the digestive glands. In many living mollusks digestion occurs in part intracellularly within the cells of the distal tubules and in part extracellularly in the stomach. In the ancestral mollusks digestion was largely intracellular.
Most have kidneys (metanephridia) Tubules connecting pericardial cavity (coelom) and nephridiopore
Nervous system
Well developed nervous system (focus on cephalopods)
Brain with lobes. Large nerve to all parts of body. Large optic nerves. Memory in octopus.
Sense organs
Osphradia in mantle cavity for chemosensory and sediment Tentacles and rhinophores for chemosensory.
Cephalopods have highly developed eyes. Distinct images and possibly color.
Color change in cephalopods using chromatophores. Cells that contain pigments and are under neuronal and hormonal control.
Usually internal fertilization Inderect development with the presence of a trochophore larva (link to annelids), and in most cases also a veliger larva.
Trochophore larvae is a free-swimming ciliated larvae of most molluscs. In some molluscs the trochophore develops into the adult, but in other molluscs (e.g. gastropods) there is a second larval stage called the veliger
Water current
Measurement method
Terimakasih..
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