Mollusk Notes - Southgate Schools
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Transcript Mollusk Notes - Southgate Schools
Worms and Mollusks
CHAPTER 27
Flatworms
SECTION 27-1
What is a flatworm?
Phylum Platyhelminthes
No more than a few
millimeters thick
Have tissues and internal
organ systems
Have bilateral symmetry
and cephalization
Known as acoelomates
(“without coelem,” which
is a fluid filled body
cavity)
Form and Function in Flatworms
Feeding
Digestive cavity with a
single opening through
which both food and
wastes pass
Parasitic worms obtain
nutrients from foods that
have already been
digested by their hosts
Form and Function in Flatworms
Respiration, Circulation, and Excretion
Rely on diffusion to:
Transport oxygen and nutrients to internal tissues
Remove carbon dioxide and other wastes from their bodies
Have no gills or respiratory organs, heart, blood
vessels, or blood
Some have flame cells – remove excess water and
filter wastes from the body
Excretory System
Form and Function in Flatworms
Response
A head encloses several ganglia (groups of nerve
cells) that control the nervous system
Have eyespots that look like eyes, but are groups of
cells that can detect changes in the amount of light in
their environment
Form and Function in Flatworms
Movement
Two means of movement:
Cilia to help glide through water
Muscle cells allow them to twist and turn
Form and Function in Flatworms
Reproduction
Most are hermaphrodites that reproduce sexually
A hermaphrodite is an individual that has both male and
female reproductive organs
Asexual reproduction takes place by fission, in
which an organism splits in two
Groups of Flatworms
Three main groups of Flatworms
Turbellarians
Flukes
Tapeworms
Most turbellarians are free-living
Most other flatworm species are parasites
Turbellarians
Free-living flatworms
Live in marine or freshwater
Flukes
Class Trematoda
Parasitic flatworms
Infect the internal organs
of their host
Tapeworms
Class Cestoda
Long, flat, parasitic
worms
Adapted to life inside the
intestines of their host
No digestive tract
Absorb already digested
nutrients from host
Roundworms
SECTION 2
What is a Roundworm?
Phylum Nematoda
Slender, unsegmented worms with tapering ends
Range in size from microscopic to a meter
Most are free-living, inhabiting soil and water
Others are parasitic
What is a Roundworm?
Have a pseudocoelom
(“false coelom”)
Have a digestive tract
with two openings – a
mouth and an anus
Form and Function in Roundworms
Have specialized tissues and organ systems
Body systems of free-living roundworms are more
complex than parasitic ones
Form and Function in Roundworms
Feeding
Predators that use grasping mouthparts to catch and eat small
animals
Respiration, Circulation, and Excretion
Exchange gases and excrete metabolic waste through their
body walls
Depend on diffusion to carry nutrients and waste through their
bodies
Form and Function in Roundworms
Response
Simple nervous systems
Have several types of sense organs
Movement
Muscles extend the length of their bodies
Reproduction
Reproduce sexually, and most have separate sexes
Roundworms and Human Disease
Parasitic roundworms include:
Trichinosis-causing worms
Filarial worms
Ascarid worms
Hookworms
Trichinosis-Causing Worms
Trichinosis – terrible disease caused by the
roundworm Trichinella
Adult worms live and mate in the intestines of their
hosts
Humans usually get the disease from eating
undercooked pork
Filarial Worms
Threadlike worms that live in blood of birds and
mammals
Causes elephantiasis
Ascarid Worms
Serious parasite of vertebrate animals
Causes malnutrition in more than 1 billion people
worldwide
Absorbs digested food from the host’s small intestine
Hookworms
25% of people in the world are affected with
hookworms
Live in host’s intestines
Feed on blood, causing weakness and poor growth
Annelids
SECTION 27-3
What is an Annelid?
Phylum Annelida
Worms with segmented
bodies
Each segment is separated
by a septum
Have a true coelom
Form and Function in Annelids
Feeding and Digestion
Many get their food using a pharynx
Food moves from the pharynx, into the esophagus, the crop, the
gizzard, and then to the intestine
Others obtain food by filter feeding
Circulation
Closed circulatory system – blood is contained within a
network of blood vessels
Form and Function in Annelids
Respiration
Aquatic annelids often breath through gills
Land-dwelling annelids take in oxygen and give off carbon
dioxide through their moist skin
Excretion
Digestive wastes pass through the anus at the end of the
digestive tract
Cellular waste is eliminated through nephridia (excretory
organs)
Form and Function in Annelids
Nephridia
Form and Function in Annelids
Response
Well developed nervous system consisting of a brain and
several nerve cords
Brain
Ganglia
Form and Function in Annelids
Movement
Two groups of muscles that work together as part of a
hydrostatic skeleton
Reproduction
Most reproduce sexually
Some have separate sexes, others are hermaphrodites
Groups of Annelids
Three classes of Annelids
Oligochaetes
Leeches
Polychaetes
Oligochaetes
Class Oligochaeta
Contains earthworms and their relatives
Streamlined bodies
Relatively few setae
Most live in soil or freshwater
Leeches
Class Hirudinea
External parasites that suck the blood and body
fluids of their host
Polychaetes
Class Polychaeta
Contains sandworms, blood worms, and relatives
Marine annelids that have paired, paddlelike
appendages tipped with setae (brushlike structures)
Ecology of Annelids
Earthworms and many other annelids spend their
lives burrowing through soil, aerating and mixing it
Earthworms help plant matter decompose
Earthworm castings are rich in nitrogen,
phosphorus, potassium, micronutrients, and
beneficial bacteria
Mollusks
SECTION 4
What is a Mollusk?
Soft-bodied animals
Usually have an internal
or external shell
Free-swimming larval
stage called a
trocophore
Form and Function in Mollusks
True coeloms
Complex, interrelated organ systems
Form and Function in Mollusks
Body Plan
Variation on four main parts:
Foot – takes many forms
Mantle – layer of tissue that covers the
mollusk’s body
Shell – made by glands in the mantle
Visceral mass – consists of internal organs
Form and Function in Mollusks
Feeding
Can be herbivores,
carnivores, filter feeders,
detritivores, or parasites
Snails and slugs feed
using a tongue-shaped
structure called a radula
Form and Function in Mollusks
Feeding
Clams, oysters, and
scallops use gills
Food enters through a
siphon – tubelike
structure through which
water enters and leaves
the body
Excurrent
siphon
Incurrent
siphon
Form and Function in Mollusks
Respiration
Aquatic mollusks breathe
using gills inside their
mantle cavity
Land snails and slugs
respire through the moist
surface of their skin
Gills
Form and Function in Mollusks
Circulation
Some have open circulatory systems – works well for
slow-moving mollusks (snails and clams)
Others have closed circulatory systems – works best
for fast moving mollusks (octopi and squid)
Heart
Form and Function in Mollusks
Excretion
Nephridia remove wastes from the blood and release
it outside the body
Nephridium
Form and Function in Mollusks
Response
Two-shelled mollusks have simple nervous systems
Octopi and relatives have the most highly developed
nervous systems of all invertebrates
Octopus opening a jar
Form and Function in Mollusks
Movement
Move in a variety of ways
Snails secrete mucus and
move over surfaces using
the foot
Octopi use a form a jet
propulsion
Reproduction
Reproduce in a variety of
ways
Snails and two-shelled
mollusks: external
fertilization (sexually)
Tentacled mollusks and
some snails: internal
fertilization (sexually)
Groups of Mollusks
Three major classes:
Gastropods
Bivalves
Cephalopods
Gastropods
Class Gastropoda
Shell-less or single-shelled
Move using muscular foot on ventral side
Includes: pond snails, land slugs, sea butterflies, sea
hares, limpets, and nudibranchs
Bivalves
Class Bivalvia
Have two shells held together by one or two powerful
muscles
Include: clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops
Cephalopods
Class Cephalopoda
Soft-bodied
Head is attached to a single foot
Foot is divided into tentacles or arms
Includes: octopi, squids, cuttlefishes, and nautiluses
Ecology of Mollusks
Mollusks play many different roles in living systems:
Feed on plants
Prey on animals
Filter algae out of the water
Eat detritus
Some mollusks are hosts to symbiotic algae or to
parasites; others are themselves parasites
Mollusks are food for many organisms