1 / 22

Torsion in Gastropoda

Torsion in Gastropoda. Dr. Inavolu S Chakrapani PRR & VS Govt. College Vidavalur. Adult Gastropod. Veliger Larva. Veliger Larva. General Organization of an Adult Gastropod. What is Torsion?. Rotation of visceral mass, mantle and shell 180 o with respect to head and foot.

boudreauj
Download Presentation

Torsion in Gastropoda

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Torsion in Gastropoda Dr. Inavolu S Chakrapani PRR & VS Govt. College Vidavalur

  2. Adult Gastropod

  3. Veliger Larva

  4. Veliger Larva

  5. General Organization of an Adult Gastropod

  6. What is Torsion? • Rotation of visceral mass, mantle and shell 180o with respect to head and foot. • Occurs in all Gastropods during development • Brings mantle cavity and anus to the anterior position

  7. Whichfactors cause Torsion? • Contraction of larval retractor muscles • Differential growth of the visceral mass

  8. Before Torsion.. • Mantle cavity – posterior • Ctenidia and nephridia – posterior • Alimentary canal straight • Nervous system bilaterally symmetrical • Auricles located behind the ventricle • Visceral sac is dorsal • Shell planospiral

  9. The Mechanism of Torsion • One end of foot muscle is attached to the left side of the shell. Other end is attached to the left side of foot and head by fibres. • Its contraction causes an anti-clockwise90o rotation of the visceral mass and shell.

  10. The Mechanism of Torsion • Visceral mass grows more on the left hand side. • This causes further 90o rotation • Visceral mass bends in anterio-posterior sagittal plane.

  11. The Sequence of Torsion • Firstly, mantle cavity is displaced towards the right side and then to the anterior end. Head and foot remain fixed. • Digestive tract gets looped. Mouth and anus come nearer. • Saucer shaped visceral mass and shell become cone-shaped. These are finally coiled. • Ventral portion of the visceral mass and mantle rotates.

  12. The Sequence of Torsion • Dorsal mass is twisted. Right gill and right auricle remain. Corresponding parts on the left side are lost. • Before completion of the metamorphosis, there occurs a lateral torsion resulting in adult condition.

  13. Effects of Torsion • Mantle cavity opens just behind the head. • Anus and ctenidia come forward. Auricles lie in front of the ventricle. • Alimentary canal is twisted. Mouth and anus are approximated.

  14. Effects of Torsion • The long, uncoiled pleura-visceral nerve connectives are twisted to form an 8-shaped figure. Right connective becomes supra-intestinal and the left becomes infra-intestinal. • Visceral sac becomes ventral (endogastric). • Symmetry is lost.

  15. Significance of Torsion • Garstang’s View: Torsion is an adaptive feature and useful for veliger larva to protect the soft parts against predators. • C.M.Yonge’s View: Torsion is advantageous for ventilation of mantle cavity.

  16. Significance of Torsion • Morton’s View: Mantle cavity housing the head, sense organs and respiratory organs, if placed anteriorly, would be an advantage in aquatic environement. Hence torsion. • Ghiselin’s View: Primitive gastropods developed a conical shell on the dorsal surface. To maintain balance, body prolonged anteriorly. The weight of the shell is disadvantageous while crawling. Hence torsion evolved as a compensatory mechanism.

  17. Detorsion • Reversion of torsion is known as Detorsion • It is characteristic of Euthyneura. • Incomplete detorsion - Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata (Acteon, Bulla, etc.), - • Complete detorsion, - typical Opisthobranchia (Aplysia)

  18. Detorsion • In extreme cases, as in Pterotrachea, body elongates to become wormlike. • The mantle cavity, visceral hump, external shell and even ctenidia may be lost, as in Nudibranchia (Aeolts, Doris)

  19. The Process

  20. Thank you..

More Related