Title: BDOL Interactive Chalkboard
1(No Transcript)
2Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 1 What is Biology? Unit 2 Ecology Unit
3 The Life of a Cell Unit 4 Genetics Unit 5
Change Through Time Unit 6 Viruses, Bacteria,
Protists, and Fungi Unit 7 Plants Unit 8
Invertebrates Unit 9 Vertebrates Unit 10 The
Human Body
3Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 1 What is Biology? Chapter 1
Biology The Study of Life Unit 2 Ecology
Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology Chapter
3 Communities and Biomes Chapter 4
Population Biology Chapter 5 Biological
Diversity and Conservation Unit 3 The Life of a
Cell Chapter 6 The Chemistry of Life
Chapter 7 A View of the Cell Chapter 8
Cellular Transport and the Cell Cycle
Chapter 9 Energy in a Cell
4Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 4 Genetics Chapter 10 Mendel and
Meiosis Chapter 11 DNA and Genes
Chapter 12 Patterns of Heredity and Human
Genetics Chapter 13 Genetic Technology Unit
5 Change Through Time Chapter 14 The
History of Life Chapter 15 The Theory of
Evolution Chapter 16 Primate Evolution
Chapter 17 Organizing Lifes Diversity
5Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 6 Viruses, Bacteria, Protists, and Fungi
Chapter 18 Viruses and Bacteria Chapter
19 Protists Chapter 20 Fungi Unit 7
Plants Chapter 21 What Is a Plant?
Chapter 22 The Diversity of Plants
Chapter 23 Plant Structure and Function
Chapter 24 Reproduction in Plants
6Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 8 Invertebrates Chapter 25 What Is
an Animal? Chapter 26 Sponges,
Cnidarians, Flatworms, and
Roundworms Chapter 27
Mollusks and Segmented Worms Chapter 28
Arthropods Chapter 29 Echinoderms and
Invertebrate
Chordates
7Table of Contents pages iv-v
Unit 9 Vertebrates Chapter 30 Fishes
and Amphibians Chapter 31 Reptiles and
Birds Chapter 32 Mammals Chapter 33
Animal Behavior Unit 10 The Human Body
Chapter 34 Protection, Support, and
Locomotion Chapter 35 The Digestive and
Endocrine Systems Chapter 36 The Nervous
System Chapter 37 Respiration,
Circulation, and Excretion Chapter 38
Reproduction and Development Chapter 39
Immunity from Disease
8Unit Overview pages 670-671
Invertebrates
What Is an animal?
Sponges, Cnidarians, Flatworms, and Roundworms
Mollusks and Segmented Worms
Arthropods
Echinoderms and Invertebrate Chordates
9Chapter Contents page
Chapter 27 Introduction Mollusks an Segmented
Worms 27.1 Mollusks 27.1 Section
Check 27.2 Segmented Worms 27.2 Section
Check Chapter 27 Summary Chapter 27 Assessment
10Chapter Intro-page 720
What Youll Learn
You will distinguish among the classes of
mollusks and segmented worms.
You will compare and contrast the adaptations of
mollusks and segmented worms.
1127.1 Section Objectives page 721
Section Objectives
- Identify the characteristics of mollusks.
- Compare the adaptations of gastropod, bivalve,
and cephalopod mollusks in their biomes.
12Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
What is a mollusk?
- Slugs, snails, squids, and some animals that live
in shells in the ocean or on the beach are all
mollusks. These organisms belong to the phylum
Mollusca.
- Although most species live in the ocean, others
live in freshwater and moist terrestrial habitats.
13Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
What is a mollusk?
- Some mollusks have shells, and others, including
slugs and squids, are adapted to life without a
hard covering.
14Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
What is a mollusk?
- All mollusks have bilateral symmetry, a coelom, a
digestive tract with two openings, a muscular
foot, and a mantle.
Arm
Reduced internal shell
Head
Mantle
Tentacle
Gut
Squid
Visceral mass
Shell
Mantle
Foot
15Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
What is a mollusk?
- The mantle (MAN tuhl) is a membrane that
surrounds the internal organs of the mollusk. In
shelled mollusks, the mantle secretes the shell.
Mantle
Snail
Shell
Gut
Head
Foot
Shell
Visceral mass
Foot
Mantle
16Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
How mollusks obtain food
- Snails, like many mollusks, use a rasping
structure called a radula to obtain food.
Radula
- A radula (RA juh luh), located within the mouth
of a mollusk, is a tonguelike organ with rows of
teeth. The radula is used to drill, scrape,
grate, or cut food.
17Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
How mollusks obtain food
- Octopuses and squids are predators that use their
radulas to tear up the food that they capture
with their tentacles.
- Other mollusks are grazers and some are filter
feeders.
18Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
How mollusks obtain food
- Bivalves do not have radulas they filter food
from the water.
19Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Reproduction in mollusks
- Mollusks reproduce sexually and most have
separate sexes.
- In most aquatic species, eggs and sperm are
released at the same time into the water, where
external fertilization takes place.
- Many gastropods that live on land, and a few
bivalves, are hermaphrodites and produce both
eggs and sperm. Fertilization is internal.
20Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Reproduction in mollusks
- Some marine mollusks have free swimming larvae
that propel themselves.
- Most marine snails and bivalves have another
developmental stage called a veliger in which he
beginnings of a foot, shell, and mantle can be
seen.
21Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Nervous control in mollusks
- Molusks have simple nervous systems that
coordinate their movement and behavior.
- Some more advanced mollusks have a brain.
22Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Nervous control in mollusks
- Most mollusks have paired eyes that range from
simple cups that detect light to the complex eyes
of octopuses that have irises, pupils, and
retinas similar to the eyes of humans.
23Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Circulation in mollusks
- Mollusks have a well-developed circulatory system
that includes a three-chambered heart.
Heart
24Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Circulation in mollusks
- In most mollusks, the heart pumps blood through
an open circulatory system.
- In an open circulatory system, the blood moves
through vessels and into open spaces around the
body organs.
25Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Circulation in mollusks
- Some mollusks, such as octopuses, move nutrients
and oxygen through a closed circulatory system.
- In a closed circulatory system, blood moves
through the body enclosed entirely in a series of
blood vessels.
26Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Respiration in mollusks
- Most mollusks have respiratory structures called
gills.
- Gills are specialized parts of the mantle that
consist of a system of filamentous projections
that contain a rich supply of blood for the
transport for gases.
27Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Excretion in mollusks
- Mollusks are the oldest known animals to have
evolved excretory structures called nephridia.
- Nephridia (nih FRIH dee uh) are organs that
remove metabolic wastes from an animals body.
- Mollusks have one or two nephridia that collect
wastes from the coelom, which is located around
the heart only.
28Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Excretion in mollusks
- Wastes are discharged into the mantle cavity, and
expelled from the body by the pumping of the
gills.
29Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Diversity of Mollusks
- Phylum Mollusca is large and diverse.
- Three mollusk classesGastropoda, Bivalvia, and
Cephalopodainclude the most common and well-
known species.
30Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Gastropods One-shelled mollusks
- The largest class of mollusks is Gastropoda, or
the stomach-footed mollusks.
- The name comes from the way the animals large
foot is positioned under the rest of its body.
31Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Gastropods One-shelled mollusks
- Shelled gastropods include snails, abalones,
conches, periwinkles, whelks, limpets, cowries,
and cones.
- Instead of being protected by a shell, the body
of a slug is protected by a thick layer of mucus.
32Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Gastropods One-shelled mollusks
- Colorful sea slugs, also called nudibranchs, are
protected in another way.
33Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Gastropods One-shelled mollusks
- When certain species of sea slugs feed on
jellyfishes, they incorporate the poisonous
nematocysts of the jellyfish into their own
tissues without causing these cells to discharge.
- Any fishes trying to eat the sea slugs are
repelled when the nematocysts discharge into the
unlucky predator.
34Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Bivalves Two-shelled mollusks
- Two-shelled mollusks such as clams, oysters, and
scallops belong to the class Bivalvia.
- Most bivalves are marine, but a few species live
in freshwater habitats.
35Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Bivalves Two-shelled mollusks
- Bivalves have no distinct head or radula. Most
use their large, muscular foot for burrowing in
the mud or sand at the bottom of the ocean or a
lake.
- A ligament, like a hinge, connects their two
shells, called valves strong muscles allow the
valves to open and close over the soft body.
36Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Bivalves Two-shelled mollusks
- One of the main differences between gastropods
and bivalves is that bivalves are filter feeders
that obtain food by filtering small particles
from the surrounding water.
- Gill cilia beat to draw water in through an
incurrent siphon.
- As water moves over the gills, food and sediments
become trapped in mucus.
37Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Bivalves Two-shelled mollusks
- Cilia that line the gills push food particles to
the mouth.
- Large particles, sediment, and anything else that
is rejected is transported to the mantle where it
is expelled through the excurrent siphon, or to
the foot, where it is eliminated from the
animals body.
38Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Cephalopods Head-footed mollusks
- This class includes the octopus, squid,
cuttlefish, and chambered nautilus.
- The only cephalopod with a shell is the chambered
nautilus, but some species, such as the
cuttlefish, have a reduced internal shell.
39Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Cephalopods Head-footed mollusks
- In cephalopods, the foot has evolved into
tentacles with suckers, hooks, or adhesive
structures.
- Cephalopods swim or walk over the ocean floor in
pursuit of their prey, capturing it with their
tentacles.
40Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Cephalopods Head-footed mollusks
- Once tentacles have captured prey, it is brought
to the mouth and bitten with beaklike jaws.
- Then the food is torn and pulled into the mouth
by the radula.
41Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Cephalopods Head-footed mollusks
- Cephalopods have siphons that expel water.
- These mollusks can expel water forcefully in any
direction, and move quickly by jet propulsion.
Squids can attain speed of 20m per second using
this system of movement.
Direction of squid
Water in
Water out
42Section 27.1 Summary pages 721-727
Cephalopods Head-footed mollusks
- Squids and octopuses also can release a dark
fluid to cloud the water.
- This ink helps to confuse their predators so
they can make a quick escape.
43Section 1 Check
Question 1
Which of the following mollusks does NOT
have a radula, and why?
A. octopus
B. sea snail
C. clam
D. slug
The answer is C. Clams are filter feeders that
do not need a radula to obtain food.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
44Section 1 Check
Question 2
Which of the following is NOT a function of
the tentacles of a land snail?
A. smelling
B. feeling
C. moving the eyes
D. capturing prey
The answer is D, capturing prey.
45Section 1 Check
Question 3
Which are the first mollusks you would
expect to be affected by pollution and why?
A. clams
B. snails
C. octopuses
D. squid
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
46Section 1 Check
The answer is A. Clams are filter feeders. They
would be most likely to ingest plankton and
become polluted. Later, other mollusks like sea
snails that prey on clams might ingest the same
pollutant when they eat the clams.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
47Section 1 Check
Question 4
Nephridia are organs used for _____.
A. circulation
B. respiration
C. movement
D. excretion
The answer is D, excretion.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
4827.2 Section Objectives page 728
Section Objectives
- Describe the characteristics of segmented worms
and their importance to the survival of these
organisms.
- Compare and contrast the classes of segmented
worms.
49Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
What is a segmented worm?
- Segmented worms are classified in the phylum
Annelida. They include leeches and bristleworms
as well as earthworms.
- Segmented worms are bilaterally symetrical and
have a coelom and two body openings.
50Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
What is a segmented worm?
- The basic body plan of segmented worms is a tube
within a tube.
- The internal tube, suspended within the coelom,
is the digestive tract.
51Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
What is a segmented worm?
- Food is taken in by the mouth, an opening in the
anterior end of the worm, and wastes are released
through the anus, an opening at the posterior end.
52Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
What is a segmented worm?
- Most segmented worms have tiny bristles called
setae (SEE tee) on each segment.
- The setae help segmented worms move by providing
a way to anchor their bodies in the soil so each
segment can move the animal along.
Setae
53Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Segmentation supports diversified functions
- The most distinguishing characteristic of
segmented worms is their cylindrical bodies that
are divided into ringed segments.
- In most species, this segmentation continues
internally as each segment is separated from the
others by a body partition.
54Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Segmentation supports diversified functions
- Each segment has its own muscles, allowing
shortening and lengthening of the body.
- Segmentation also allows for specialization of
body tissues.
- Certain segments have modifications for functions
such as sensing and reproduction.
55Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Nervous system
- Segmented worms have simple nervous systems in
which organs in anterior segments have become
modified for sensing the environment.
- Some sensory organs are sensitive to light, and
eyes with lenses and retinas have evolved in
certain species.
56Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Nervous system
- In some species there is a brain located in an
anterior segment.
Setae
- Nerve cords connect the brain to nerve centers
called ganglia, located in each segment.
Gizzard
Aortic arches
Brain
Nerve
Esophagus
Intestine
Crop
Mouth
57Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Circulation and respiration
- Segmented worms have a closed circulatory system.
- Blood carrying oxygen to and carbon dioxide from
body cells flow through vessels to reach all
parts of the body.
- Segmented worms must live in water or in wet
areas on land because they also exchange gases
directly through their moist skin.
58Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Digestion and excretion
- Segmented worms have a complete internal
digestive tract that runs the length of the body.
- Food and soil taken in by the mouth eventually
pass to the gizzard.
59Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Digestion and excretion
Gizzard
Crop
Mouth
- In the gizzard, a muscular sac and hard particles
help grind soil and food before they pass into
the intestine.
60Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Digestion and excretion
- Undigested material and solid wastes pass out the
worms body through the anus.
- Segmented worms have two nephridia in almost
every segment that collect waste products and
transport them through the coelom and out of the
body.
Nephridia
61Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction in segmented worms
- Earthworms and leeches are hermaphrodites,
producing both eggs and sperm.
- During mating, two worms exchange sperm.
- Each worm forms a capsule for the eggs and sperm.
62Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction in segmented worms
- The eggs are fertilized in the capsule, then the
capsule slips off the worm and is left behind in
the soil.
- In two to three weeks, young worms emerge from
the eggs.
63Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction in segmented worms
- Bristleworms and their relatives have separate
sexes and reproduce sexually.
64Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction in segmented worms
- Usually eggs and sperm are released into the
seawater, where fertilization takes place.
- Bristleworm larvae hatch in the sea and become
part of the plankton.
- Once segment development begins, the worm settles
to the bottom.
65Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Diversity of Segmented Worms
- The phylum Annelida includes three classes
class Oligochaeta, earthworms class Polychaeta,
bristleworms and their relatives and class
Hirudinea, leeches.
66Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Earthworms
- Earthworms are the most well-known annelids
because they can be seen easily by most people.
- As an earthworm burrows through soil, it loosens,
aerates, and fertilizes the soil.
67Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Gizzard
Mouth
Crop
Setae
Circulatory system
Nephridia
Nervous system
Earthworms
68Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Bristleworms and their relatives
- The class Polychaeta includes bristleworms and
their relativesfanworms, lug worms, plumed
worms, and sea mice.
69Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Bristleworms and their relatives
- Most body segements of a polychaete have many
setae, hence the name. Polychaete means many
bristles.
- Most body segments of a polychaete also have a
pair of appendages called parapodia, which can be
used for swimming or crawling over corals and the
bottom of the sea.
70Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Bristleworms and their relatives
- Parapodia also function in gas exchange.
- A polychaete has a head with well-developed sense
organs, including eyes.
71Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Leeches
- Leeches are segmented worms with flattened bodies
and usually no setae.
- Unlike earthworms, many species are parasites
that suck blood or other body fluids from the
bodies of their hosts, which include ducks,
turtles, fishes, and humans.
72Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Leeches
- Front and rear suckers enable leeches to attach
themselves to their hosts.
73Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Leeches
- The saliva of the leech contains chemicals that
act as an anesthetic.
- Other chemicals prevent the blood from clotting.
- A leech can ingest two to five times its own
weight in one meal.
74Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Origins of Mollusks and Segmented Worms
- Fossil records show that mollusks lived in great
numbers as long as 500 million years ago.
- Gastropod, bivalve, and cephalopod fossils have
been found in Precambrian deposits.
75Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Origins of Mollusks and Segmented Worms
- Annelids probably evolved in the sea, perhaps
from larvae of ancestral flatworms.
76Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Origins of Mollusks and Segmented Worms
- Tubes constructed by polychaetes are the most
common fossils of this phylum.
- Some of these tubes appear in the fossil record
as early as 540 million years ago.
77Section 2 Check
Question 1
Why must segmented worms live in a moist
environment?
Answer
Segmented worms must live in or near water
because they exchange gases directly through
their moist skin.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
78Section 2 Check
Question 2
During mating, earthworms exchange _____.
A. eggs
B. sperm
C. capsules containing both sperm and eggs
D. larvae
The answer is B, sperm.
79Section 2 Check
Question 3
1
Using this figure, give the reason why you
would determine this to be the anterior end of
the organism?
2
3
Brain
4
Pharynx
5
6
Esophagus
7
8
Blood vessel
9
10
11
Crop
12
Nephridia
13
14
15
16
80Section 2 Check
The anterior portion of an organism would
logically include the brain, as well as the
initial parts of a gut, like the esophagus and
crop (the esophagus and crop are necessary to the
initial phases of digestion).
1
2
3
Brain
4
Pharynx
5
6
Esophagus
7
8
Blood vessel
9
10
11
Crop
12
13
14
15
16
81Section 2 Check
Question 4
Which organism would likely get the most use
from a gizzard, an earthworm or a leech?
Answer
A gizzard grinds organic matter into small pieces
so the nutrients in the food can be absorbed.
Since a leechs food is liquid (blood), the
earthworm would use a gizzard the most, to grind
the food and soil it ingests.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
82Section 2 Check
Question 5
Earthworms are considered to be ______.
A. predators
B. parasites
C. filter feeders
D. grazers
The answer is D, grazers.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
83Chapter Summary 27.1
Mollusks
- Mollusks have bilateral symmetry, a coelom, and a
digestive tract with two openings. Many also
have shells.
- Most gastropods, such as snails, have a shell,
mantle, radula, an open circulatory system,
gills, and nephridia. Gastropods without shells,
such as slugs, are protected by a covering of
mucus.
84Chapter Summary 27.1
Mollusks
- Bivalve mollusks have paired shells, called
valves, and are filter feeders. They have no
radula. Clams and scallops are bivalves.
- Cephalopods have tentacles with suckers, beaklike
jaws, a mouth with a radula, and a closed
circulatory system. Cephalopods include the
octopus, squid, and chambered nautilus.
85Chapter Summary 27.2
Segmented Worms
- The phylum Annelida includes the earthworms,
bristleworms, and their relatives, and leeches.
Annelida are bilaterally symmetrical and have a
coelom and two body openings some have larvae
that look like the larvae of mollusks. Their
bodies are cylindrical and segmented.
- Earthworms have complex digestive, excretory,
muscular, and circulatory systems.
86Chapter Summary 27.2
Segmented Worms
- Bristleworms and their relatives are mostly
marine species. They have many setae and
parapodia that are used for crawling along.
- Leeches are flattened, segmented worms. Most are
aquatic parasites.
- Fossil remains of mollusks show that they first
lived over 500 million years ago. Fossil records
show that segmented worms first appeared 540
million years ago.
87Chapter Assessment
Question 1
With the exception of slugs, all mollusks that
are slow-moving or sessile have shells. Why?
CA Biology/Life Sciences 6g
88Chapter Assessment
Shells provide organisms with a place to hide
that is always near them, since they cannot
quickly escape a predator.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 6g
89Chapter Assessment
Question 2
Why is a closed circulatory system more efficient
than an open circulatory system?
CA Biology/Life Sciences 6g
90Chapter Assessment
A closed circulatory system is more efficient
because blood is transported entirely in closed
vessels that can reach deep into the organisms
tissues and provide efficient gas exchange. In
an open circulatory system, tissues farthest from
the open spaces containing blood are not so
likely to be reached for efficient gas exchange.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 6g
91Chapter Assessment
Question 3
Why do scientists consider cephalopods to be the
most recently evolved of all mollusks?
Answer
Cephalopods possess the most complex structures
of all mollusks, such as complex eyes, complex
brains, closed circulatory systems and feet that
have evolved into complex structures like arms
and tentacles.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 6g
92Chapter Assessment
Question 4
Why are mollusks considered to be excellent index
fossils?
Answer
Mollusks are generally well preserved in the
fossil record, abundant, easy to recognize, and
widely distributed geographically.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 8e
93Chapter Assessment
Question 5
Which of the following is NOT a food source for
humans and why?
A. abalones
B. octopuses
C. ammonites
D. conches
The answer is C. Ammonites are not a food source
for any organism, because they are extinct.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 8e
94Chapter Assessment
Question 6
How does a leech benefit from the chemicals in
its saliva that prevent clots from forming?
Answer
Preventing blood clots keeps a free flow of blood
available to the leech until it is done feeding.
95Chapter Assessment
Question 7
What is the function of parapodia?
Answer
Polychaetes use parapodia for swimming, crawling,
and for gas exchange.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 9a
96Chapter Assessment
Question 8
Why do annelids have such a limited fossil record?
Answer
The fossil record for segmented worms is limited
because segmented worms have almost no hard body
parts from which fossils could develop.
CA Biology/Life Sciences 8e
97Chapter Assessment
Question 9
What is the function of setae?
Answer
Setae help segmented worms move by providing a
way to anchor their bodies in the soil so each
segment can move the animal along.
98Chapter Assessment
Question 10
Which of the following features do annelids NOT
share with mollusks?
A. coelom
B. bilateral symmetry
C. digestive tract with two openings
D. segmented bodies
The answer is D, segmented bodies.
99Photo Credits
Photo Credits
- General Biololgical Inc.
- Digital Stock
- Joey Jacques
- Corbis
- PhotoDisc
- Alton Biggs
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101End of Chapter 27 Show