Molluscs symmetry and cleavage
Bilaterial
Protostomes - Spiral cleavage
Coelomate - triploblastic -(body cavity). Have a reduce coelom
3 body sections
Head
Foot
Visceral mass
What is the visceral mass?
Guts etc.
Contained within shell
covered by mantle
Mantle secretes shell
Excretory system
Metanepridia
what does the mantle cavity (gap) contain?
Gills
Covered in cilia to drive water over gills
Circulatory system
Nerve Ring
Goes round the oesophagus
Nerves going to foot and visceral mass
What is a radula ?
Generalised mollusc reproduction
Dioecious (separate sexes)
Some hermaphrodite
Trochophore larvae
3 morphologically diverse groups of molluscs
Gastropods
Bivalves
Cephalopods
How do gastropods differ from the generalised molluscs ?
Development of head (eyes, tentacles etc)
Dorso-ventral elongation of body (grow upward - can lead to coiling)
Shell (Shield - protective retreat)
Torsion
What is torsion?
Rotation of the visceral mass and mantle cavity - 180°
Mantle cavity and visceral mass end up over the head
Nervous system ends up in a knot
Why does torsion happen?
Still unsure as to why gastropods undergo torsion
Disadvantages of torsion
Anus over head
Twisted nervous system
Some gastropods have evolved holes in shells to expel waste e.g. limpet
De-torsion
Gastropod shell coiling
Most specialised group of gastropods?
Pulmonates (land snails and slugs)
why are Pulmonates specialised?
Pulmonates reproduction
Pulmonate sequential hermaphroditism
Can change sex
E.g. slipper limpet
Pile up - females at bottom and males at top - if bottom ones die top will become female
How have Bivalves developed from classic molluscs?
Bivalves feeding
Most bivalves are filter feeders
Enlarged gills used for feeding
Bivalves eyes
Can have eyes on mantle edge - some simple and some more complex