Class Gastropoda - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 48
About This Presentation
Title:

Class Gastropoda

Description:

Class Gastropoda Snails - largest class of molluscs ~ 85,000 living spp. ~ 15,000 fossil spp. Habitats: marine benthos, ocean plankton, freshwater, land – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1858
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 49
Provided by: Microsoft124
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Class Gastropoda


1
Class Gastropoda
  • Snails - largest class of molluscs
  • 85,000 living spp.
  • 15,000 fossil spp.
  • Habitats marine benthos, ocean plankton,
    freshwater, land

2
Gastropod characteristics
  • 1. Torsion - primitive bilateral symmetry lost
    during development
  • Twisting of visceral mass, mantle, and mantle
    cavity

3
Gastropod characteristics
  • 2. Definite head eyes, tentacles
  • 3. Flat ventral foot
  • 4. Mantle cavity w/gills or lungs
  • 5. Buccal cavity w/ radula

4
Characters cont.
  • 6. Coiled shell - one continuous piece
  • operculum on posterior foot of some

5
Characters, cont.
  • 7. Centralized complex nervous system
  • 8. Hermaphroditic or dioecious
  • 9. Oviparous or ovoviparous

6
10. Larval form
  • Archaeogastropoda have trochophore larva
  • Many marine snails have veliger larva
  • Freshwater terrestrial species usually hatch as
    young snails

7
Gastropod classification
  • 3 groups
  • Caenogastropoda includes gilled snails
  • Opisthobranchs - reduced shell
  • Pulmonata - lungs

8
Caenogastropoda
  • Mantle cavity anterior
  • 1 or 2 gills
  • shell and operculum usually present
  • most are dioecious

9
Caenogastropoda
  • A. slit shells - deep water species
  • Abalones (Haliotis)
  • 9 spp on our Pacific coast
  • Commercially harvested

10
Caenogastropoda
  • B. keyhole limpets - Fissurella
  • conical shells
  • C. Limpets - Acmaea

11
Caenogastropoda
  • D. topshells, turban shells, star shells
  • Astraea

12
Neritimorpha
  • E. Nerites (Nerita) intertidal in Caribbean
  • some freshwater terrestrial

13
Prosobranchs
  • Male with penis
  • Fertilization internal
  • 1 monopectinate gill
  • 1 auricle
  • 1 coeloduct

14
Prosobranchs
  • A. Freshwater apple snails -
  • Viviparus, Pomacea

15
Prosobranchs
  • B. Turret shells - worm shells caecums, ceriths,
    some freshwater genera, all have high shells

16
Prosobranchs
  • C. Violet snails - pelagic grazers on man owar
  • Vellela, Porpita
  • Janthina secretes bubble mass for floatation

17
Prosobranchs
  • D. Cap shells, slipper shells
  • Crepidula change sex w/age
  • see slides of veliger larva

18
Prosobranchs
  • E. Conchs - Strombus
  • Feed on algae, turtlegrass
  • Commercial harvest in Caribbean

19
  • F. Cowries Cypraea - graze on algae, sponges,
    gorgonians, and tunicates
  • Mantle covers most of shell when extended
  • Favorites of shell-collectors
  • No periostracum
  • Italians call them porcellanos little pigs
  • Porcelain got its name

20
Cowries
21
  • G. Heteropods - pelagic, swimming snails
    w/reduced shell
  • Carinaria (see Fig. 10-30, p. 399)

22
  • H. Moon shells - predators on molluscs
  • bore into shells
  • Lunatia
  • Polinices

23
Moon shells
  • Muscular suction disk holds snail on clam shell
  • Drill through shell with radula
  • Wiggle proboscis into flesh
  • Remove most of flesh from clam

24
  • I. Helmet shells, tritons, tuns
  • Predators on molluscs and echinoderms
  • Long proboscis
  • Large shells

25
  • J. Periwinkles - intertidal
  • Littorina

26
  • Mostly same characteristics as Mesogastropoda
  • Radula has only 3 teeth in a transverse row
  • Most are marine
  • Most are carnivores

27
  • A. Drills - Murex, Urosalpinx
  • Drill holes in shells of bivalves and barnacles
  • Oyster drill and others cause economic losses

28
  • B. Whelks - Busycon
  • Tulip shells - Fasciolaria
  • Predators and carrion feeders

29
  • C. Olives, miters, and volutes
  • Colorful, mostly tropical snails
  • prey on invertebrates

30
  • D. Cones - Conus
  • Most prey on inverts
  • Those that prey on fish can be dangerous to
    humans
  • Fig 10-42, p. 409

31
Conus
  • Long proboscis with harpoon-like radular tooth
  • venom gland

32
Glory of the sea cone shell
33
Opisthobranchia
  • Detorsion - brings mantle cavity to right side
  • 1 gill, 1 auricle, 1 coelomoduct
  • Shell often reduced or absent
  • Mantle cavity often reduced or absent
  • Many are secondarily bilateral symmetric
  • Hermaphroditic

34
Opisthobranchia
  • A. Bubble shells - Bulla
  • Predators with thin, reduced shell

35
Opisthobranchia
  • B. Sea hares - Aplysia
  • Thin, caplike shell overgrown by mantle
  • Vegetarians (herbivores)
  • Can eject milky fluid from mantle cavity
  • A. californica has largest body of all gastropods

36
Opisthobranchia
  • C. Sea slugs
  • With or w/o shell
  • Berthelinia is a bivalve gastropod
  • Fig. 10-23, p. 392

37
Opisthobranchia
  • D. Pteropods or sea butterflies
  • 2 orders with and w/o (naked) shells
  • Planktonic with foot modified into wing-like
    flaps for swimming
  • Often occur in enormous numbers

38
More Pteropods
39
Opisthobranchia
  • E. Nudibranchs
  • Often with secondary gills and cerata (hornlike
    dorsal projections)
  • Many endemics

40
Opisthobranchia
  • F. Parasitic Opisthobranchs
  • 2 orders
  • One ectoparisitic on bivalves and annelids
  • One endoparasitic in sea cucumbers

41
Pulmonata
  • Charactistics like Opisthobranchia, but w/o gill
  • Mantle cavity converted to lung
  • Shell usually present
  • No operculum
  • Hermaphroditic

42
Pulmonata
  • A. freshwater snails
  • Lymnaea, Physa, Planorbis
  • Freshwater limpets
  • Most come to surface for air
  • Some have developed secondary gills
  • Descended from terrestrial ancestors

43
Pulmonata
  • B. Land snails and slugs
  • Helix
  • Limax
  • C. Intertidal slugs w/posterior anus

44
Class Scaphopodatusk shells
  • 300 spp.
  • Sedentary, marine burrowing, in 6 - 1800 m depth
  • Shells resemble elephant tusks
  • Most burrow in sand, few in mud
  • Feed on microscopic organisms foraminiferans
  • Considered offshoot of early bivalve ancestors

45
Scaphopod characteristics
  • 1. Tusk-like shell open at both ends
  • 2. Bilateral symmetry (like bivalves)
  • 3. Rudimentary head
  • no eyes
  • Head has threadlike, food gathering tentacles
    (captacula)

46
Foot
47
Scaphopod characteristics
  • 4. Radula present
  • 5. Circulatory system reduced - sinuses
  • Gills absent
  • 6. Dioecious, trochophore and veliger larval
    stages

48
Scaphopod classification
  • Two families (representative species)
  • Dentalium - conical shell
  • Cadulus Siphonodentalium - globular shell,
    enlarged foot
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com