chapter 11 molluscan success. evolutionary perspective triploblastic coelomate very successful...

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Chapter 11 Molluscan Success

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Page 1: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Chapter 11

Molluscan Success

Page 2: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Evolutionary Perspective

• Triploblastic• Coelomate• Very successful

– 100,000 living species• Relationships to other animals

– Lophotrochozoans

Page 3: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 4: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Molluscan Characteristics1. Body of two parts: head-foot and visceral mass2. Mantle that secretes a calcareous shell and covers the visceral

mass3. Mantle cavity functions in excretion, gas exchange, elimination of

digestive wastes, and release of reproductive products.4. Bilateral symmetry5. Trochophore larvae, spiral cleavage, and schizocoel coelom

formation6. Coelom reduced 7. Open circulatory system (except Cephalopoda)8. Radula usually present

Page 5: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Body Organization• Head-foot

– Elongate – Mouth– Attachment and locomotion

• Visceral mass– Dorsal to head-foot– Organs of digestion, circulation, reproduction

• Mantle– Enfolds body– Secretes shell

• Mantle cavity– Gas exchange, excretion, elimination of digestive wastes and

reproductive products• Radula

– Supported by odontophore– Rasping food

Page 6: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 7: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 8: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

(a)

(b)

Page 9: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Gastropoda• Snails and slugs• 35,000 living species• Torsion

– 180o counterclockwise twisting of visceral mass, mantle, and mantle cavity during development

– Possible adaptive significance• Head enters shell first.• Clean water enters anteriorly oriented

mantle cavity opening.• Mantle sensory organs move to head region.

Page 10: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 11: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Gastropoda

• Shell coiling– Earliest fossils, one plane– Modern, asymmetrical

• More compact• Internal organs asymmetrical and

sometimes no longer paired

• Locomotion– Flattened foot– Cilia propel over mucous trail– Muscular waves

Page 12: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Gastropoda

• Feeding and digestion– Most scrape algae and attached organisms– Herbivores, predators, scavengers– Digestive tract

• Ciliated• Food incorporated into mucous mass called

protostyle.• Gas exchange

– One or two gills in mantle cavity– Land snails (pulmonates)

• Mantle cavity richly vascular for gas exchange with air

Page 13: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

(a)

Page 14: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Other Maintenance Functions

• Open circulatory system– Blood bathes tissues in sinuses.– Heart

• Single ventricle and single auricle– Functions

• Transports nutrients and gases• Hydraulic skeleton

• Nervous system– Six ganglia plus nerve cords

• Sensory structures– Eyes at base or end of tentacles– Statocysts in foot– Osphradia in mantle cavity

Page 15: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Other Maintenance Functions

• Excretion– Single nephridium

• Result of shell coiling– Discharges into mantle cavity or

adjacent to mantle cavity (pulmonates)– Ammonia (aquatic species)– Uric acid (pulmonates)

Page 16: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Reproduction• Dioecious or monoecious

– External fertilization• Some dioecious marine species

– Copulation• Sperm transfer may be mutual or one-way.

– Eggs shed singly, in strings, or in masses

– Larval stages• Trochophore• Veliger

Page 17: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Gastropod Diversity• Subclasses

– Prosobranchia• 20,000 species• Mostly marine

– Opisthobranchia• 2,000 species• Mostly marine• Sea hares, sea slugs• Shell, mantle cavity, and gills reduced or lost

– Pulmonata• 17,000 species• Freshwater or terrestrial• Vascular mantle cavity serves as lung

Page 18: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

(a) (b)

(c)

Page 19: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Bivalvia

• Clams, oysters, mussels, scallops• 30,000 species• Shell and associated structures

– Single shell consisting of two hinged valves

– Mantle sheetlike and covers laterally compressed body.

Page 20: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

.

Page 21: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Gas Exchange, Filter Feeding, and Digestion

• Sedentary filter feeders– Loss of head and radula– Expansion of cilia-covered gills into

folded sheets (lamellae)• Cilia create water currents into and through

mantle cavity. – Gas exchange in water tubes – Food trapped along gill surface and transported to

food grooves and labial palps

– Digestion • Crystaline style and gastric shield

Page 22: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 23: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 24: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 25: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Other Maintenance Functions

• Open circulatory system– Mantle and gills oxygenate blood

• Nephridia – Below pericardial cavity– Open to suprabranchial chamber

• Nervous system– Three pairs of interconnected ganglia– Sensory receptors at mantle margin

Page 26: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Reproduction and Development

• Most dioecious• Gonads within visceral mass• External fertilization• Trochophore and veliger larval stages• Freshwater in family Unionidae

– Parasitic larval stage– Glochidium

Page 27: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 28: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

(c)

Page 29: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 30: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

.

Page 31: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 32: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Gooduck

Page 33: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Cephalopoda

• Squid, octopuses, cuttlefish, and nautiluses

• Foot modified into circle of tentacles or arms and incorporated into siphon

• Head in line with visceral mass• Muscular mantle

Page 34: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals
Page 35: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Cephalopoda• Shell

– Reduced or absent except in nautilus• Locomotion

– Jet propulsion using muscles of mantle compressing water within mantle cavity and siphon

• Feeding and Digestion– Predators

• Tentacles, jaws, radula– Digestive tract muscular with large digestive

glands

Page 36: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

.

Page 37: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Other Maintenance Functions

• Closed circulatory system• Nervous system

– Large brains– Complex sensory structures

• Eyes• Statocysts

• Chromatophores– Color changes involved with courtship

and other displays• Ink glands

Page 38: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

The cephalopod eye.

Page 39: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Learning

• Unparalleled in comparison to any other invertebrate and many vertebrates

• Evolved in response to predatory lifestyles

Page 40: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Reproduction and Development

• Dioecious• Male produces spermatophores

– Transfers to female’s mantle cavity using modified tentacle (hectocotylus)

• Eggs deposited singly or in masses attached to substrate.

• Eggs tended by parents.

Page 41: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Polyplacophora• Chitons• Reduced head, flattened foot, shell

consisting of eight dorsal valves, muscular mantle extends beyond margin of shell

• Feed on attached algae• Ladderlike nervous system• Dioecious with external fertilization

Page 42: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

(a)

Page 43: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Scaphopoda

• Tooth shells or tusk shells• Marine, burrowing• Conical shell open at both ends• Dioecious with trochophore and

veliger larvae

Page 44: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Scaphopoda.

Page 45: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Monoplacophora

• Marine• Undivided arched shell• Broad, flat foot• Serially repeated pairs of gills and

foot retractor muscles• Dioecious

Page 46: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Monoplacophora.

Page 47: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Figure 11.23

Class Solenogastres

• Marine substrates• Lack shell• Crawl on ventral

foot• Minute calcareous

spicules• Carnivores

Page 48: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Class Caudofoveata

• Deep sea• Wormlike • Feed on foraminifera• Lack shell, foot, and nephridia• 120 species

Page 49: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Further Phylogenetic Considerations

• More than 500 million years old• Lophotrochozoa• Shell and muscular foot not ancestral

– Solenogaster spicules may be similar to ancestral “shell”.

– Muscular foot first seen in Polyplacophora.

• Quickly diversified into modern classes

Page 50: Chapter 11 Molluscan Success. Evolutionary Perspective Triploblastic Coelomate Very successful –100,000 living species Relationships to other animals

Cladogram showing possible evolutionary relationships among the molluscs.