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Chapter 27: Mollusks and Annelids

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Title: Chapter 27: Mollusks and Annelids


1
Chapter 27Mollusks and Annelids
  • Section 1
  • Mollusks

2
Mollusks
  • Phylum Mollusca
  • Evolved in the sea more than 600 million years
    ago
  • More than 100,000 mollusk species
  • Divided into 7 classes
  • Live everywhere
  • Range in size from snails as small as a grain of
    sand to giant squids that may grow more than 20
    meters long
  • Wide range of forms and colors

3
Examples of Mollusks
4
What is a Mollusk?
  • Very different but all share similar
    developmental patterns
  • Their different forms are the results of
    variations on the same basic body plan
  • Mollusks are defined as soft-bodied animals that
    have an internal or external shell
  • Although some present day mollusks lack shells,
    they are thought to have evolved from shelled
    ancestors
  • Most mollusks have a special kind of larva called
    a trochophore
  • Swim in open water and feed on tiny floating
    plants
  • Also seen in segmented worms
  • Evolved from a common ancestor

5
Form and Function in Mollusks
6
Form and Function in Mollusks
  • The body plan of almost all mollusks consists of
    four basic parts
  • Foot
  • Usually contains the mouth and other structures
    associated with feeding
  • Many different shapes
  • Mantle
  • Thin, delicate tissue layer that covers most of
    the body
  • Shell
  • Made by glands in the mantle that secrete calcium
    carbonate
  • Visceral mass
  • Contains the internal organs

7
Form and Function in Mollusks
  • Basic body parts have taken on different forms as
    mollusks evolved adaptations to different
    habitats
  • Type of foot and shell mollusks have are used to
    group them into classes

8
Feeding
  • Every mode of feeding is seen in this phylum
  • Many mollusks feed with a tongue-shaped structure
    called a radula
  • Layer of flexible skin that carries hundreds of
    tiny teeth
  • Inside is a rod of cartilage
  • When the mollusk feeds, it places the tip of the
    radula on the food and pulls the skin back and
    forth over the cartilage

9
Feeding
10
Feeding
  • Although they may have a radula, carnivorous
    mollusks such as octopi and certain sea slugs
    typically use sharp jaws to eat their prey
  • Produce poisons
  • Mollusks such as clams, oysters, and scallops are
    filter feeders
  • Use feathery gills to sift food from the water

11
Respiration
  • Gills serve as organs of respiration as well as
    filters for food
  • Aquatic mollusks breathe by using gills located
    inside their mantle cavities
  • Land snails and slugs breathe by using a
    specially adapted mantle cavity that is lined
    with many blood vessels
  • The surface is constantly kept moist so that
    oxygen can enter the cells
  • Because the mantle loses water in dry air, most
    land snails and slugs must live in moist places
  • Prefer to move around at night, during
    rainstorms, and times when humidity is high

12
Respiration
13
Internal Transport
  • Oxygen that is taken in by the respiratory system
    and nutrients that are the products of digestion
    are carried by the blood to all parts of a
    mollusks body
  • The blood is pumped by a simple heart through an
    open circulatory system
  • Blood does not always travel inside blood vessels
  • Instead, blood works its way through body tissues
    in open spaces called sinuses
  • The flow of blood through sinuses is not
    efficient enough for fast-moving octopi and
    squids
  • Closed circulatory system
  • Blood always moves inside vessels

14
Excretion
  • Mollusks must eliminate waste products
  • Undigested food becomes solid waste that leaves
    through the anus in the form of feces
  • Cellular metabolism produces nitrogen-containing
    waste in the form of ammonia
  • Must be removed from body fluids
  • Simple tube-shaped organ called nephridia
  • Remove ammonia from the blood and release it to
    the outside

15
Response
  • Vary greatly in the complexity of their nervous
    systems
  • Clams and other two-shelled mollusks
  • Simple nervous system
  • Several small ganglia near mouth, a few nerve
    cords, simple sense organs
  • Octopi and other tentacled mollusks
  • Highly developed nervous systems
  • Well-developed brain
  • Complex sense organs
  • Can be trained to perform different tasks in
    order to obtain a reward or avoid punishment
  • Often studied by psychologists interested in the
    way animals learn

16
Reproduction
  • Sexes are separate and fertilization is external
  • Most mollusks release eggs and sperm into water
  • Find each other by chance
  • Free-swimming larvae develop
  • Tentacled mollusks fertilization takes place
    inside the body of the female
  • Some snails are hermaphrodites

17
Snails, Slugs, and Their Relatives
  • Class Gastropoda
  • Gastropods stomach-foot
  • Many have a one piece shell that protects their
    soft bodies
  • Some gastropods, such as slugs, have no shell
  • Protected by their behavior
  • Some also contain toxins or chemicals that are
    secreted to warn predators
  • Bright colors warn predators to stay away

18
Snails, Slugs, and Their Relatives
19
Two-Shelled Mollusks
  • Class Bivalvia
  • Shells with a hinge
  • Common bivalves include clams, oysters, and
    scallops
  • Although larvae are free-swimming, they soon
    settle down to the relatively quiet life on the
    bottom of a body of water
  • Most are sessile
  • Mantle glands make the shells
  • Mantle glands also keep the shells inside
    surfaces smooth and comfortable by secreting
    layers of mother-of-pearl
  • If a grain of sand or small pebble gets caught
    between the mantle and the shell it forms a pearl

20
Two-Shelled Mollusks
21
Tentacled Mollusks
  • Cephalopods members of the class Cephalopoda
    are among the most active and interesting
    mollusks
  • Includes octopi, squids, cuttlefish, and
    nautiluses
  • head-foot
  • Most have 8 flexible tentacles equipped with a
    number of round sucking disks that are used to
    grab their prey
  • Move by a siphon and jet propulsion
  • Can secrete large amounts of dark colored, foul
    tasting ink
  • Can change color to to match their surroundings
  • Most modern cephalopods have an internal shell or
    no shell at all
  • Contains gases that allow them to float

22
Tentacled Mollusks
23
How Mollusks Fit into the World
  • Many different roles in living systems
  • Important source of food
  • Environmental monitors
  • Biological research
  • Can cause harm to crops
  • Cause sickness on occasion

24
Chapter 27Mollusks and Annelids
  • Section 2
  • Annelids

25
Annelids
  • The soft-bodied earthworm is the most common
    terrestrial, or land-dwelling, segmented worm
  • There are approximately 9000 species of segmented
    worms that live in moist soil, in fresh water,
    and in the sea
  • Segmented worms, or annelids, live just about
    everywhere in the world

26
What Is an Annelid?
  • Phylum Annelida
  • An annelid is a round, wormlike animal that has a
    long, segmented body
  • Annelids range in size from tiny aquatic worms
    less than half a millimeter long to giant
    earthworms more than 3 meters long
  • Annelids also vary greatly in color, patterning,
    number of bristles, and other superficial features

27
Form and Function in Annelids
  • The many segments of an annelids body are
    separated by internal walls called septa
  • Most of the body segments are virtually identical
    to one another
  • However, some segments are modified to perform
    special functions
  • For example, the first few segments may carry one
    or more pairs of eyes, several pairs of antennae,
    and other sense organs

28
Feeding
  • The digestive tract extends from the mouth to the
    anus
  • Food enters through the mouth and travels through
    the gut, where it is digested
  • Like mollusks, annelids have evolved structures
    and behaviors that allow them to use a wide
    variety of foods
  • One feeding organ that has evolved many different
    forms in different groups of annelids is the
    pharynx, or the muscular front end of the
    digestive tube

29
Feeding
  • Many annelids can extend the pharynx through the
    mouth
  • In carnivorous annelids, this type of pharynx
    usually has two or more sharp jaws attached to it
  • When a suitable animal approaches, the worm
    lunges forward, rapidly extends the pharynx, and
    grabs the prey with its jaws
  • When the pharynx returns to its normal position,
    it carries the food back to the gut

30
Many polychaete annelids, such as the sandworm
Nereis, use hook like jaws to capture prey or
nibble on algae
31
The digestive system of an earthworm is shown
here. The pharynx pumps a mixture of food and
soil into a tube called the esophagus. The food
then moves through the crop, where it can be
stored, and through the gizzard, where it is
ground into smaller pieces. The food is digested
in the intestine. Undigested materials pass
through the intestine and are eliminated through
the anus.
32
Respiration
  • Aquatic annelids often breathe through gills
  • Terrestrial annelids take in oxygen and give off
    carbon dioxide through their skin
  • Because the skin must stay moist to make gas
    exchange possible, the worms die if the skin
    dries out
  • To help guard against this, terrestrial annelids,
    such as earthworms, secrete a thin protective
    coating called a cuticle to hold moisture around
    them

33
The spaghetti worm uses its long tentacles to
pluck bits of detritus from the ocean
floor In plume worms, a brush-shaped
structure on the head is used in filter feeding
and in respiration.
34
Internal Transport
  • Annelids typically have closed circulatory
    systems organized around two blood vessels that
    run the length of their bodies
  • In each body segment is a pair of smaller vessels
    called ring vessels that connect the two main
    blood vessels and supply blood to the internal
    organs
  • In annelids such as earthworms, several of the
    ring vessels near the anterior end of the worm
    are larger than the other ring vessels and have
    muscle tissue in their walls
  • These vessels are often called hearts because
    they contract rhythmically and help pump blood
    through the system

35
Excretion
  • Annelids produce two kinds of wastes
  • Solid wastes pass out through the anus at the end
    of the gut
  • Wastes resulting from cellular metabolism are
    eliminated by nephridia
  • A pair of nephridia in each body segment removes
    waste products from the body fluids and carries
    them to the outside

36
Response
  • Many annelids are active animals with
    well-developed nervous systems
  • The brain sits on top of the gut at the front end
    of the body
  • Two large nerves pass around the gut and connect
    the brain with a pair of ganglia below
  • From these ganglia, a ventral nerve cord runs the
    entire length of the worm
  • Nerves from each segment of the worm enter and
    leave the nerve cord at a pair of small ganglia
  • These nerves help carry messages from sense
    organs and coordinate the movements of muscles

37
Response
  • Sense organs are best developed in the
    free-living marine species of annelids
  • Have sensory tentacles, statocysts, chemical
    receptors, and two or more pairs of eyes
  • Many other annelids have much simpler sensory
    systems
  • Earthworms have no specialized sense organs
  • They rely on simple sensory cells in the skin

38
Sense organs are best developed in free-swimming
annelids such as the paddleworm, which has a pair
of beady eyes and a number of sensory tentacles
on its head.
39
Movement
  • Annelids have two major groups of muscles in
    their body walls
  • Longitudinal muscles
  • Runs from the front of the worm to the rear
  • When contracted, they make the worm shorter
  • Circular muscles
  • Runs in circles around the body of the worm
  • When contracted, they make the worm skinnier

40
Reproduction
  • Most annelids reproduce sexually
  • In some annelids, the sexes are separate
  • However, annelids such as earthworms and leeches
    are hermaphrodites that undergo internal
    fertilization
  • Although an individual worm produces both sperm
    and eggs, it rarely fertilizes its own eggs

41
Reproduction
  • Instead, worms pair up, attach themselves to each
    other, and exchange sperm
  • Each worm stores the sperm it has received in
    special sacs
  • When eggs are ready for fertilization, a band of
    thickened, specialized segments called the
    clitellum secretes a mucus ring into which eggs
    and sperm are released
  • The ring then slips off the worms body and forms
    a cocoon that shelters the eggs

42
Sandworms, Bloodworms, and Their Relatives
  • Class Polychaeta
  • Common and important marine worms
  • Polychaetes are characterized by paired paddle
    like appendages on their body segments
  • These appendages are tipped with bristles
  • Polychaetes live in cracks and crevices in coral
    reefs, in sand, mud, and poles of rocks, and even
    out in the open water

43
Although they look very different from each
other, both the fanworm and the fireworm are
polychaetes. The fanworm is a filter feeder that
retreats into its tube when threatened. The
fireworm defends itself with poisonous bristles
that break off and penetrate skin at the
slightest touch. The pain caused by these
bristles gives the fireworm its name.
44
Earthworms and Their Relatives
  • Class Oligochaeta
  • Contains earthworms and related species
  • Oligochaetes are annelid worms that live in soil
    and open water
  • Most oligochaetes live in soil or freshwater
  • Oligochaetes have fewer bristles than polychaetes

45
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46
Leeches
  • Class Hirudinea
  • Contains the leeches, most of which live in
    tropical countries
  • Freshwater organisms that exist as external
    parasites, drinking blood and body fluids from
    their host
  • All leeches have powerful suckers at both ends of
    their bodies
  • These suckers are used to attach a leech to its
    host

47
Leeches
  • Leeches penetrate the skin of their host in one
    of two ways
  • Use a muscular proboscis
  • Tubular organ that they force into the tissue of
    their host
  • Use razor sharp jaws
  • Once the wound has been made, the leech uses its
    muscular pharynx to suck blood from the area

48
Leeches
  • Both types of leeches release a special secretion
    from their salivary glands to prevent the blood
    from clotting as they drink it
  • Some leeches also produce a substance that
    anesthetizes the wound thus keeping the host
    from knowing it has been bitten
  • During feeding, a leech can swallow as much as 10
    times its weight in blood
  • Can take up to 200 days to digest
  • A leech can live for a year before it must feed
    again

49
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50
How Annelids Fit into the World
  • Important in many habitats
  • Aquatic species are food for many fish, crab, and
    lobster
  • Earthworms perform an essential task in
    conditioning soil
  • By constantly burrowing through the ground, they
    help aerate the soil
  • Without the efforts of these annelids, the
    structure and fertility of farm soils would
    degenerate quickly, lowering crop yields
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