Features of defense

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Also known as: Mollusca, mollusc
Also spelled:
mollusc
Key People:
William Keith Brooks
Augustus A. Gould

The external cover that extends over the mantle may consist of a hardened epithelial layer called a cuticle, separate calcareous plates, or a shell. Another defense includes the ability of most solenogasters and chitons to roll the body up. Chitons, neopilinids, and limpets can adhere firmly to the substrate by a powerful suction pad foot. Protection is also afforded if the animal is able to withdraw into its shell; a snail has the added advantage of having a hardened plate (operculum) on the foot that blocks the shell opening (auricle) once the animal has withdrawn. Burrowing by caudofoveates, scaphopods, many bivalves, and some gastropods also offers protection from predators.

In many gastropods, slippery mucus is secreted from mantle extensions, or parapodia, as a defense against larger predators, such as sea stars (starfish). In scaphopods, mucus is secreted against an aggressor from the anterior mantle. Certain molluscan subgroups secrete noxious chemicals either as a poisonous secretion of the salivary glands or as distasteful acids in mantle cells. Glandular secretions by solenogasters or the gastropod superfamily Eolidacea prevent the stinging nettle capsules (nematocysts) of cnidarians, when consumed, from expulsing the stingers; moreover, some gastropods are able to store and then use the capsules in their own defense when attacked by a predator. Some mollusks secrete fluids to divert or frighten a predator, to provide camouflage, or to inhibit the predator’s sense of smell. For example, the ink in cephalopods, the luminous cloud secreted by some deep-sea squids, and the purple fluid from the sea hare (Aplysia; a gastropod of the subclass Opisthobranchia) distract and confuse the predator and conceal the prey. Camouflage or frightening coloration are effective in protecting cuttlefishes, octopuses, and sea slugs, as well as other gastropods.

Form and function

The highly varied evolutionary development of basic molluscan features has left only a few characters that may be taken as typical. As a result, molluscan form varies much among levels and subgroups (Figure 1).

External features

The most obvious external molluscan features are the dorsal epidermis called the mantle (or pallium), the foot, the head (except in bivalves), and the mantle cavity. The mantle in caudofoveates and solenogasters is covered by cuticle that contains scales or minute, spinelike, hard bodies (spicules), or both (aplacophoran level). The chitons (class Polyplacophora) develop a series of eight articulating plates or valves often surrounded by a girdle of cuticle with spicules; in all other mollusks, the mantle secretes an initially homogeneous shell. The mantle and shell are laterally compressed in scaphopods and bivalves; in gastropods and cephalopods the head is free of the mantle and shell. In bivalves a dorsal hinge ligament joins two shell valves, which are further held together by two adductor muscles with attachment points on the inner aspect of each valve.

The molluscan body, which contains all the visceral elements (such as the digestive tract, gonads, and heart), is connected to the mantle by dorsoventral musculature. The head, when present, has tentacles called captacula in scaphopods, labial palps in bivalves, head tentacles in gastropods, and arms in cephalopods. The primitive ciliary gliding surface with forward pedal and sole glands is reduced in caudofoveats and some gastropods, as well as in some bivalves, and it is narrowed to a ridged tract in solenogasters as well as some members of the placophore genus Cryptoplax. The foot forms an anteriorly elongated and slendered burrowing organ in scaphopods, is ax-shaped to vermiform in bivalves, and is modified to a siphon or funnel in cephalopods. Among gastropods of the subclass Opisthobranchia, the foot may be extended laterally to form swimming lobes (parapodia), or even flapping wings (in pteropods, or sea butterflies).

Sea otter (Enhydra lutris), also called great sea otter, rare, completely marine otter of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floats on back. Looks like sea otter laughing. saltwater otters
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The mantle, or pallial, cavity is found between the mantle rim and the body. The pallial complex is a collection of structures at the roof of the mantle cavity and typically contains at least one pair of lamellate gills (ctenidia), a thick layer of glandular epithelium called mucus tracts or hypobranchial glands, and the outlets for the digestive, excretory, and reproductive systems. A loss of the ctenidia (along with the mucus tracts) is seen in scaphopods, advanced gastropods, septibranch bivalves, and solenogasters.

Internal features

Muscles and tissues

The internal molluscan organization is almost entirely soft-bodied. The body cavity is filled with fibrous tissue or fluid-filled spaces (hemocoel), or both. When filled with fluid, the hemocoel expands against the body wall and fibrous tissues, providing a rigid framework and stretching opposing muscles. This same fluid pressure, generated by contraction of other muscles, allows the foot to extend from the shell and penetrate the sediment for burrowing. Conversely, extrusion of the head and foot from the shell in gastropods and cephalopods, shell elevation in gastropods, and the rapid expansion and contraction of the mantle required for jet propulsion in squid and other cephalopods are the result of muscle contractions in the mantle tissue.

The basic sets of muscle systems, fully retained only in solenogasters, include the subintegumental musculature below the mantle; a pair of longitudinal muscle bundles below the mantle margins, which roll the body up and which are almost disintegrated in conchiferans; and the dorsoventral musculature, which is reduced in caudofoveates and shell-less gastropods and which in shelled gastropods forms the columellar muscles that attach the animal to its shell.