Zoology

Gastropoda: Feeding Habits

Feeding habits of gastropods are as varied as their shapes and habitats, but all include use of some adaptation of the radula. Most gastropods are herbivorous, rasping particles of algae from hard surfaces. Some herbivores are grazers, some are browsers, and some are planktonic feeders. Haliotis, the abalone, holds seaweed …

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Gastropoda: Torsion and Coiling

Torsion Gastropod development varies with the particular group under discussion, but in general there is a trochophore larval stage followed by a veliger larval stage where the shell first forms. The veliger has two ciliated velar lobes, used in swimming, and the developing foot is visible. The mouth is anterior …

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Rotifers: Reproduction

Rotifers are dioecious, and males are usually smaller than females. However, despite having separate sexes, males are entirely unknown in the class Bdelloidea, and in the Monogononta they seem to occur only for a few weeks of the year. The female reproductive system in the Bdelloidea and Monogononta consists of …

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Classes of Molluscs: Polyplacophora, Scaphopoda

Chitons (Gr. coat of mail, tunic)  repreent a somewhat more diverse molluscan group with about 1000 currently described species. They are rather flattened dorsoventrally and have a convex dorsal surface that bears seven or eight articulating limy plates, or valves, hence their name Polyplaophora (“many plate bearers”). The plates overlap …

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Classes of Molluscs: Caudofoveata, Solenogastres

For more than 50 years five classes of living molluscs were recognized: Amphineura, Gastropoda, Scaphopoda, Bivalvia (also called Pelecypoda), and Cephalopoda. Discovery of Neopilina in the 1950s added another class (Monoplacophora), and Hyman contended that solenogasters and chitons were separate classes (Aplacophora and Polyplacophora), lapsing the name Amphineura. Subsequently, Aplacophora …

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An Introduction to Molluscs

Mollusca (mol-lus’ ka) (L. molluscus, soft) is one of the largest animal phyla after Arthropoda. There are over 90,000 living species and some 70,000 fossil species. Molluscs are coelomate lophotrochozoan protostomes, and as such they develop via spiral mosaic cleavage and make a coelom by schizocoely. The ancestral larval stage …

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Phylum Brachiopoda and Phylum Phoronida

Brachiopoda (brak-i-op’ – o-da) (Gr. brachio¯n, arm, pous, podos, foot), or lamp shells, are an ancient group. Although about 325 species are now living, some 12,000 fossil species, which once flourished in Paleozoic and Mesozoic seas, have been described. Modern forms have changed little from early ones. Genus Lingula (L. …

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Molluscs: Form and Function

The enormous variety, great beauty, and easy availability of shells of molluscs have made shell collecting a popular pastime. However, many amateur shell collectors, even though able to nameh undreds of the shells that grace our beaches, know very little about the living animals that created those shells and once …

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Phylum Ectoprocta (Bryozoa)

Ectoprocta (ek-to-prok’ – ta) (Gr. ektos, outside, + proktos, anus) contains aquatic animals that often encrust hard surfaces. Most species are sessile, but some slide slowly, and others crawl actively, across the surfaces they inhabit. With very few exceptions, they are colony builders. Each member of a colony is small, …

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Phylum Acanthocephala: Form and Function

Members of phylum Acanthocephala (a-kan’ -tho-sef ‘-a-la) (Gr.akantha, spine or thorn, + kephale¯, head) are commonly called “spiny-headed worms.” The phylum derives its name from one of its most distinctive features, a cylindrical, invaginable proboscis bearing rows of recurved spines, by which it attaches itself to the intestine of its …

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