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  • 00:01

    Did you know that snails are related to squid?

  • 00:05

    Coming up!

  • 00:06

    Jonathan explores the weird world of molluscs!

  • 00:10

    Welcome to Jonathan Bird’s Blue World!

  • 00:25

    There are around 85,000 known species of Molluscs, a very diverse phylum of animals.

  • 00:32

    Among the Molluscs are some of the most well-known sea creatures, like snails, clams, mussels,

  • 00:41

    squid, and octopods.

  • 00:46

    Although one might not see an obvious physical relationship between a snail and a cuttlefish,

  • 00:50

    they are remarkably similar in their internal construction, clearly sharing a common ancestor

  • 00:57

    hundreds of millions of years ago.

  • 01:00

    In general, molluscs have 3 body regions: a head, a visceral mass, and a "foot."

  • 01:06

    The head contains the sense organs and the "brain," while the visceral mass (basically

  • 01:11

    the body) contains the internal organs.

  • 01:14

    The "foot" is the muscular lower part of the body in contact with the substrate.

  • 01:19

    Most, but not all molluscs, have a shell.

  • 01:23

    Molluscs also have an extension of the body wall called the mantle.

  • 01:28

    This portion of the animal's anatomy is responsible for secreting the shell in a manner similar

  • 01:33

    to the way human fingersnails grow.

  • 01:36

    Many molluscs have a kind of tongue called a radula, which is rough like sandpaper and

  • 01:42

    is used to rasp away at food.

  • 01:44

    The radula is made of a hard material called chitin, the same material of which Arthropod

  • 01:49

    exoskeletons are made.

  • 01:53

    About 70% of the molluscs are contained within the class Gastropoda, meaning "stomach-foot".

  • 02:00

    These are the familiar snails, limpets, and nudibranchs, known for crawling on their stomachs.

  • 02:06

    There are also a small number of land Gastropods such as some snails, and slugs.

  • 02:13

    The snails, limpets and abalones have a shell, while the slugs and nudibranchs do not.

  • 02:20

    The Waved Whelk, common in the north Atlantic, is a perfect example of a classic gastropod,

  • 02:27

    crawling along on a foot with primitive eyes on stalks, and a proboscis to smell for food.

  • 02:34

    The hard shell is a nearly indestructible portable home that makes the whelk, and most

  • 02:40

    other snails, pretty difficult for predators to eat.

  • 02:48

    Some snails have taken the shell to a higher level.

  • 02:51

    The Murex snail’s shell has added defenses.

  • 02:56

    Most snails are scavengers, just cruising around looking for dead stuff to eat.

  • 03:02

    But some snails, like the so-called cone shells, have become predators, hunting their food

  • 03:08

    with venomous harpoons.

  • 03:11

    The beautiful shells of many gastropods have made them targets for collectors, so it may

  • 03:17

    be hard to believe but even snails can be overfished and endangered.

  • 03:22

    A nudibranch has no shell for protection, but instead has fleshy projections on its

  • 03:28

    back called cerata that contain stinging cells stolen from the local hydroid population.

  • 03:35

    The cerata also significantly increase the animal’s surface area, thereby functioning

  • 03:41

    as gills to absorb oxygen from the water.

  • 03:44

    The term nudibranch, meaning “naked gills,” is a reference to the cerata.

  • 03:52

    Other nudibranchs actually have a tuft of naked gills that don’t sting.

  • 03:58

    For protection, these species secret a toxic slime that makes them unappealing.

  • 04:08

    Looking at a scallop, it’s hard to imagine how it’s possible for this animal to be

  • 04:12

    related to a snail.

  • 04:14

    But scallops, oysters, mussels and clams are all bivalves, another class of molluscs.

  • 04:22

    The name bivalve means "two-shells" and these animals live exclusively in water—about

  • 04:29

    80% of them in seawater.

  • 04:32

    But the zebra mussel is a rather infamous freshwater bivalve, known for its invasiveness

  • 04:38

    in U.S. waterways and lakes.

  • 04:43

    The bivalve may either burrow through the bottom, or attach itself to the substrate

  • 04:47

    with glue-like strings called "byssal threads."

  • 04:51

    Some bivalves, like scallops do not attach themselves because they prefer to be able

  • 04:56

    to swim away with a squirt of water forced from the mantle, for example to escape from

  • 05:03

    attacking sea stars.

  • 05:06

    Most bivalves feed by filtering organic particles from water.

  • 05:11

    Some of the giant clams found in the Pacific have symbiotic algae in their skin tissue,

  • 05:17

    and can utilize the light of the sun to make food though photosynthesis, although they

  • 05:22

    still filter feed as well.

  • 05:25

    If you think clams don’t look much like their cousins the snails, this one is going

  • 05:30

    to blow your mind.

  • 05:32

    Cephalopods are also molluscs!

  • 05:35

    The class cephalopoda means “head-foot” because the head is connected to the feet,

  • 05:42

    technically called arms.

  • 05:44

    The body is out in front.

  • 05:46

    If people were built like this, we would look a lot different.

  • 05:50

    “Hey what’s up?

  • 05:51

    My head is where my butt should be!”

  • 05:55

    Squid, octopods, cuttlefish and nautiluses are all cephalopods.

  • 06:01

    Perhaps the most obvious difference between most cephalopods and other molluscs is the

  • 06:06

    apparent lack of a shell.

  • 06:08

    The octopods don’t have shells at all, and the squid have only a tiny internal shell.

  • 06:17

    Nautiluses--the most primitive of the group--are the only Cephalopods with an external shell.

  • 06:24

    Even though cephalopods don’t look anything like bivalves or gastropods, they have very

  • 06:29

    similar internal construction, which makes it clear to biologists that they have common

  • 06:35

    ancestors with the gastropods and bivalves.

  • 06:38

    Hence they’re molluscs.

  • 06:40

    Cephalopods have the most well-developed nervous systems of all molluscs, as well as the most

  • 06:47

    advanced eyes.

  • 06:49

    The cephalopod eye is one of the most notable examples of convergent evolution in all of

  • 06:55

    the animal world, because this eye evolved from a completely different origin than the

  • 07:00

    eyes of mammals, yet it turned out to function in almost the same exact way.

  • 07:08

    Cephalopods, therefore, have good eyesight.

  • 07:14

    This eyesight is well suited for finding prey.

  • 07:16

    The cephalopod then grasps the prey firmly with

  • 07:26

    its arms and eats the prey with a mouth located between the arms.

  • 07:33

    Cephalopods also have a beak, very similar to that of a parrot, used to help bite into

  • 07:40

    prey.

  • 07:43

    All octopods have a salivary gland that secretes venom to subdue prey.

  • 07:48

    The venom of the Blue Ringed Octopus is so powerful that the bite of this octopus is

  • 07:53

    often lethal to a human.

  • 07:55

    Fortunately, it takes a lot of provocation to get an octopus--any octopus--to bite a

  • 08:02

    person.

  • 08:04

    While the octopus has eight sucker-equipped arms, the squid and cuttlefish actually have

  • 08:09

    ten.

  • 08:10

    Eight of the squid arms are of the same length, while the other two are extra long, and are

  • 08:16

    used for helping to grab prey.

  • 08:19

    These two additional arms are called the tentacles.

  • 08:24

    There are four more classes of less common molluscs, most of which live in deep water

  • 08:29

    and most people will never see.

  • 08:32

    The Phylum Mollusca is one of the most diverse-looking groups of animals in the world.

  • 08:38

    It’s hard to believe that something like a clam is closely related to something as

  • 08:42

    outlandish as a cuttlefish.

  • 08:45

    Sometimes truth really is stranger than fiction when it comes to the amazing life in the Blue

  • 08:53

    World.

  • 08:54

    Hey Everyone!

  • 08:57

    Have you subscribed to our extras Channel BlueWorld_plus?

  • 09:01

    It’s full of great behind-the-scenes and additional fun content!

  • 09:06

    Check it out now!

  • 09:08

    Molluscs!

  • 09:09

    Molluscs!

  • 09:10

    Why can’t I say it?

All

The example sentences of LIMPETS in videos (1 in total of 1)

the determiner snails noun, plural , limpets noun, plural and coordinating conjunction abalones noun, plural have verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner shell noun, singular or mass , while preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner slugs noun, plural and coordinating conjunction nudibranchs noun, plural do verb, non-3rd person singular present not adverb .

Definition and meaning of LIMPETS

What does "limpets mean?"

/ˈlimpit/

noun
marine mollusc which has shallow conical shell and broad muscular foot.
other
Sea animal with shell found clinging to rocks.