Mollusca (from Latin: mollis = soft) is the second-largest phylum of invertebrate animals. They are soft-bodied animals, usually protected by a hard calcareous shell.
| Class | Key Characteristics | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Gastropoda | Largest class. Asymmetrical body due to torsion. Usually have a single, coiled shell. Well-developed head with tentacles. | Pila (apple snail), Helix (garden snail), Slug |
| Bivalvia (Pelecypoda) | Body laterally compressed, enclosed in a shell with two valves. Head is indistinct, radula is absent. Filter feeders. | Unio (freshwater mussel), Oyster, Clam |
| Cephalopoda | Most advanced molluscs. Head is large with complex eyes. Foot is modified into arms/tentacles with suckers. Shell is internal or absent. Closed circulatory system. | Loligo (squid), Sepia (cuttlefish), Octopus |
| Scaphopoda | Marine, with a tusk-shaped, tubular shell open at both ends. | Dentalium (tusk shell) |
Pila globosa, the apple snail, is amphibious and exhibits a dual mode of respiration, allowing it to survive both in water and on land.
Torsion is a unique developmental process in gastropod larvae where the visceral mass and mantle rotate up to 180° counter-clockwise with respect to the head and foot.
Consequences of Torsion:
Advantages: The primary advantage is thought to be defensive. It allows the larva to withdraw its vulnerable head into the protection of the shell first, followed by the tougher foot which closes the opening with its operculum.
Detorsion is a secondary, reverse rotation (90°-180°) that occurs in the evolution of some gastropod groups (like sea slugs and land slugs). It is a reversal of torsion, leading to a more streamlined body form and the movement of the anus and gills back towards a posterior position. This is often associated with the reduction or loss of the shell.
Echinodermata (from Greek: echinos = spiny, derma = skin) are a phylum of exclusively marine, coelomate, and triploblastic animals. They are characterized by their spiny skin and unique water-vascular system.
| Class | Key Characteristics | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Asteroidea | Star-shaped body with five or more arms not sharply set off from the central disc. Tube feet are in open ambulacral grooves and have suckers. | Asterias (starfish) |
| Ophiuroidea | Star-shaped body with long, slender, flexible arms sharply set off from the central disc. No suckers on tube feet. Ambulacral grooves are closed. | Ophiura (brittle star) |
| Echinoidea | Globular or disc-shaped body, lacking arms. Endoskeleton forms a rigid test. Body covered with movable spines. Have a complex jaw apparatus called Aristotle's lantern. | Echinus (sea urchin), Clypeaster (sand dollar) |
| Holothuroidea | Elongated, cucumber-shaped body, soft and leathery. No arms or spines. Endoskeleton is reduced to microscopic ossicles. | Holothuria (sea cucumber) |
| Crinoidea | Plant-like body, attached to the substratum by a stalk (in sea lilies). Arms are branched and feathery. Mouth and anus on the oral surface. | Antedon (feather star), Sea lily |
The water-vascular system is the most distinctive feature of echinoderms. It is a hydraulic system derived from the coelom.