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    Molluscs (British spelling) or mollusks (American spelling) are animals belonging to phylum Mollusca. The word mollusc is derived from the French mollusque, which originated from ...

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Mollusk

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Bivalve MolluskBivalve Mollusk
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Ecology and Importance

Mollusks are abundant and hence important in food chains in many habitats. A large number are herbivores or grazers, especially the chitons and many gastropods. Tusk shells and some other mollusks feed on matter deposited on the bottom, whereas most bivalves filter suspended materials from the water. Many gastropods are carnivorous, most of them preying on slow-moving or attached animals. Cephalopods are active predators on larger animals such as crabs. Numerous mollusks are important food sources for humans, but some gastropods damage crops, and others harbor disease-causing parasites.

Scientific classification: Mollusks make up the phylum Mollusca. In the class Aplacophora, the body is wormlike. No shell exists, only a tough mantle, and the foot has virtually been lost. The three orders of the class Polyplacophora (chitons) have a series of eight shell plates (valves) in a row and are well adapted to clinging on rocks. The mainly fossil Monoplacophora is now known to have one living genus, Neopilina, discovered in deep water in 1952. The animal has a single flat shell and multiple gills. The class Bivalvia have a shell divided into two valves, and they feed with their gills. As a consequence the head is poorly developed. Members of the class Scaphopoda (tusk shells) have a long, tapered, slightly curved shell and live on sandy bottoms. Members of the class Gastropoda (snails and slugs) are asymmetrical and have only one shell or, as in slugs, are shell-less. The three subclasses of the Gastropoda are the Prosobranchia (mostly marine snails, with three orders), Opisthobranchia (sea slugs and their allies, with eight orders), and Pulmonata (lunged mollusks, largely freshwater and terrestrial, with two orders). The class Cephalopoda are modified by reduction of the foot and shell and the development of arms around the mouth. The two subclasses are Nautiloidea ( Nautilus, with four gills and other archaic traits such as an external shell) and Coleoidea (octopuses, squid, and cuttlefish, with two gills and other advanced traits).

See Bivalve; Cephalopod; Chiton; Gastropod.



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