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The mollusks or molluscs are the large and diverse phylum Mollusca, which includes a variety of familiar creatures well-known for
their decorative shells or as seafood. These range from tiny snails and clams to the octopus and squid (which are considered the most intelligent invertebrates). The giant squid
is the largest invertebrate, and, except for their larvae and some recently captured juveniles, has never been observed alive,
although the Colossal Squid is likely to be even larger.
Mollusks are triploblastic
protostomes. The principal body cavity is a blood-filled hemocoel, with an actual coelom present but reduced to vestiges around the hearts, gonads, and metanephridia (kidney-like
organs). The body is divided into a head, often with eyes or tentacles, a muscular foot and a visceral mass housing the organs.
Covering the body is a thick sheet called the mantle, which in most forms
secretes a calcareous shell.
Mollusks have a mantle, which is a shell-like outer cover, and a muscular foot that is used for motion. Many mollusks have
their mantle produce a calcium carbonate external shell and their
gill extracts oxygen from the water and disposes waste. All species of the phylum Mollusca
have a complete digestive tract that starts from the mouth to the anus. Many have a radula, mostly composed of chitin, in the mouth, which allows then to scrape food from the surface by sliding back and
forth. Mollusks also have a coelom, made from cell masses, where all organs are
suspended. Unlike Coelomates,
mollusks lack body segmentation.
Development passes through one or two trocophore stages, one of which (the veliger) is unique to the group. These suggest a close relationship between the mollusks and various other
protostomes, notably the Annelids. Mollusk fossils are some of the best known and are
found from the Cambrian onwards. There are eight living classes:
- Class Caudofoveata (deep-sea wormlike creatures; 70 known species)
- Class Aplacophora (solenogasters, deep-sea wormlike creatures; 250
species)
- Class Polyplacophora (chitons; 600 species, rocky marine
shorelines)
- Class Monoplacophora (deep-sea limpet-like creatures; 11 living
species)
- Class Bivalvia (also Pelecypoda) (clams,
oysters, scallops, mussels; 8,000 species)
- Class Scaphopoda (tusk shells;
350 species, all marine)
- Class Gastropoda (snails and
slugs, limpets, sea hares; sea
angel, sea butterfly, Sea
Lemon; 40,000 species)
- Class Cephalopoda (squids, octopuses, nautilus, cuttlefish; 786 species, all marine)
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Caudofoveata |
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Aplacophora |
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Polyplacophora |
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Monoplacophora |
| mollusk |
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Gastropoda |
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Cephalopoda |
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Bivalvia |
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Scaphopoda |
Brusca & Brusca (1990) suggest that the bivalves and scaphopods are sister groups, as are the gastropods and cephalopods,
so indicated in the relationship diagram above.
Malacology is the technical name for the scientific study of mollusks.
References
- Brusca & Brusca, 1990. Invertebrates, Sinauer Associates, Inc., Sunderland, Mass.
The
Mollusk is the title of a 1997 album by Ween.
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