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Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005

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Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005 Chapter 12 Phylum Mollusca Part Three Class Cephalopoda 700 extant spp. described Nautiloids, cuttlefish, squids, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005


1
Biology 320Invertebrate ZoologyFall 2005
  • Chapter 12 Phylum Mollusca Part Three

2
Class Cephalopoda
  • 700 extant spp. described
  • Nautiloids, cuttlefish, squids, and octopods
  • Carnivores
  • Fast swimmers that compete with fish
  • Some anatomical / physiological similarities
  • Ecologically similar
  • Most active molluscs

3
  • The largest invertebrates
  • Architeuthis 20 m
  • Enteroctopus 9.6 m arm span
  • Possibly the most intelligent invertebrates
  • Highly developed nervous system
  • Image forming eyes
  • Capable of complex behaviors

4
Body Form
  • Dorsoventral axis of early molluscs elongated
  • Functionally, the ventral aspect of the
    cephalopods is really the anterior aspect
  • Head and foot are located at the anterior end
  • The name cephalopod means head foot

5
Head
  • Houses brain (more later)
  • Mouth
  • Buccal cavity
  • Beak
  • Buccal mass
  • Radula
  • Anterior gut

6
Foot and Visceral Mass
  • Foot is modified to form several appendages that
    surround the mouth
  • Arms
  • Tentacles
  • Ventral region of foot also forms tubular siphon
    (funnel)
  • Leads to mantle cavity
  • Visceral Mass
  • Dorsal
  • Elongate
  • Hump shaped

7
Mantle
  • Thick and muscular
  • Surrounds visceral mass and mantle cavity
  • Mantle cavity is ventral / anterior houses
  • One or two pairs of bipectinate, nonciliated
    gills
  • Anus w/ ink sac attached
  • Releases ink which quickly forms a cloud
  • Confuses predators and can anesthetize
    chemoreceptors
  • Nephridiopore
  • Gonopore

8
Shell
  • External in nautiloids
  • Internal in squids and cuttlefish
  • Gladius or pen
  • Cuttlebone, respectively
  • Absent in octopods

9
Buoyancy Regulation
  • Nautilus uses its shell
  • Chambers are filled with fluid and then septum
    forms
  • Gas / water can be pumped in / out of chambers
  • Those without shell use other methods
  • Replace high molecular weight sea water in coelom
    with low molecular weight ammonium ions
  • Lack of heavy external shell makes buoyancy less
    of a problem
  • Webbed octopods extend arms to increase SA and
    retard sinking
  • Web acts like a parachute

10
Locomotion
  • Important for
  • Prey capture
  • Buoyancy regulation
  • Diel vertical migration (DVM)
  • Two main types
  • Crawling
  • Swimming
  • Crawling
  • Typical of octopods

11
  • Locomotion cont
  • Swimming
  • Bell swimming in webbed octopods
  • Undulations of lateral fins
  • Jet propulsion by ejecting water from mantle
    cavity
  • Circular muscle contractions
  • Water ejected through exhalant siphon
  • Valve covers inhalant siphon
  • Propelled in opposite direction
  • Slow and fast jetting
  • Flying squids can fly 50 m through air

12
Nutrition
  • Cephalopods are visual predators, so they posses
    image forming eyes for prey detection (more
    later)
  • Raptorial
  • Capture using appendages, many of which are
    covered with suckers
  • May be toothed
  • Tentacles capture and arms manipulate in most
    cases
  • Beak is made of proteins and chitin
  • Buccal mass is large collection of muscles
    surrounding beak

13
  • Radula pulls in pieces of prey that the beak rips
    off
  • Many have venom glands that empty into buccal
    cavity
  • Venom and other secretions enter preys blood
    stream through beak wounds
  • Tetrodotoxin from little blue-ringed octopus is
    responsible for some human deaths

14
Gas Exchange
  • Considered to be concurrent in most cases
  • Ways to supplement gas exchange
  • Large gill SA
  • Some gas exchange across body surface
  • Rapid ventilation
  • Pressurized circulatory system
  • Restricted to cold water, which has higher O2
    solubility

15
Circulation
  • Closed system
  • Capillary beds are main sites of diffusion, as
    opposed to hemocoels
  • Hearts
  • One systemic - body
  • Two branchial - gills
  • Vessels lined with endothelium, as in verts
  • Hemocyanin

16
Excretion
  • Ammonotelic
  • Two nephridia in all but nautiloids (which have
    four)
  • Nephridia are attached to pericardial cavity of
    branchial hearts

17
Nervous System
  • Most developed of all inverts, and even rivals
    some verts
  • Cephalized and bilaterally symmetrical
  • Many ganglia and nerves
  • Some brains are enclosed in a cartilaginous
    cranium
  • Giant motor neurons for rapid transmission of
    impulses
  • Image forming eyes
  • Structurally similar to human eye
  • Cannot see in color
  • Can discriminate objects as small as 0.5 cm from
    1 m away

18
  • Other sensory organs
  • Epidermal hair lines
  • Analogous to lateral lines of fish
  • Sensitive to water movement and pressure changes
  • Statocysts
  • Chemoreceptors
  • For taste or smell
  • May be located on suckers and tentacles
  • All except nautiloids lack osphradia

19
Chromatophores
  • Organs with pigment cells located in dermis
  • Cells contain pigment sacs that are under nervous
    / muscular control
  • Sacs stretch out and flatten, causing pigment to
    spread out
  • Used for camouflage or when animal is alarmed
  • Some produce waves of color when making defensive
    displays
  • Also produce bioluminescence

20
Reproduction
  • Gonochoric
  • Single Gonad
  • Usually copulate but have indirect fertilization
  • Sperm is transferred in form of spermatophore
  • Male often transfers with modified arm known as a
    hectocotylus
  • Fertilization may be external (sea or mantle
    cavity) or internal
  • Often have courtship displays

21
  • Lay large (15mm) yolky eggs with gelatinous
    capsule
  • Can be free floating or attached
  • Many adults ventilate eggs while brooding
  • Some have direct development
  • Most adults have short lifespan (less than three
    years) and die after spawning

22
Nautiloids
  • Four species of Nautilus
  • Found in the Indo-Pacific ocean
  • Typically between 100 m 600 m
  • External shell that they can retract into
  • Leathery hood that acts like an operculum
  • Lack ink sack
  • Lack chromatophores
  • 90 arms
  • Some are mechanosensory and chemosensory
  • Lack suckers

23
  • Swim backwards
  • Specialize on decapods, especially hermit crabs
  • Two pairs of gills
  • Have osphradia
  • Slightly different circulatory system
  • Not entirely closed
  • No branchial hearts
  • Four nephridia

24
Cuttlefish
  • Sepia is a common genus
  • Not as fast or streamlined as squids
  • Eight arms and two tentacles
  • Swim over ocean bottom feeding on shrimps and
    crabs
  • Two gills

25
Squids
  • Loligo is a common genus
  • Can obtain greatest swimming speeds of any
    aquatic invert
  • 40 km / hr
  • Feed on fish, crustaceans, and other squids
  • Two gills
  • Eight arms and two tentacles

26
  • One of their main predators is the sperm whale
  • Sperm whales reach 20 m in length
  • 14,000 beaks found in the belly of one sperm
    whale
  • Giant squids
  • Architeuthis
  • Live at depths between 300 m and 600 m
  • Not rapid swimmers
  • Sucker scars found on sperm whales

27
Octopods
  • Octopus is a common genus
  • Two gills
  • Tend to be benthic often crawl over substrate
  • Typically live in a den
  • Leave to forage
  • Den usually littered with shells of prey items
  • Eight arms no tentacles
  • Eat a variety of prey items, but clams, snails,
    and crustaceans dominate

28
  • Pacific giant octopus
  • Enteroctopus
  • Forages up to 250 m from den
  • Paralyze prey with venom and take back to den
  • Inject with poison and enzymes
  • Some drill holes through shells with radula
  • Feeding ecology is similar to that of spiders
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