Bivalvia

Bivalvia

Taxobox
name = Bivalvia
fossil_range = Cambrian - Recent



image_width = 250px
image_caption = "Acephala" from Ernst Haeckel's "Kunstformen der Natur", 1904
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Mollusca
classis = Bivalvia
classis_authority = Linnaeus, 1758
subdivision_ranks = Subclasses
subdivision =
Anomalosdesmata
Cryptodonta
Heterodonta
Paleoheterodonta
Palaeotaxodonta
Pteriomorphia and see text

Bivalves are molluscs belonging to the class Bivalvia. They have two-part shells, and typically both valves are symmetrical along the hinge line. The class has 30,000 species, including scallops, clams, oysters and mussels. Other names for the class include Bivalva, Pelecypoda, and Lamellibranchia.

Bivalves are exclusively aquatic; they include both marine and freshwater forms. However some, for instance the mussels, can survive out of water for short periods by closing their valves.

Bivalves are unique among the molluscs for lacking a radula; they feed by siphoning and filtering large particles from water. Some bivalves are epifaunal: that is, they attach themselves to surfaces in the water, by means of a byssus or organic cementation. Others are infaunal: they bury themselves in sand or other sediments; these forms typically have a strong digging foot. Some bivalves, such as scallops, can swim.

ystematics

Due to classification schemes using single organ systems to draw phylogenies, as well as numerous naming schemes, many conflicts have arisen. More recent systems combine multiple organ systems, fossil records, as well as molecular data to draw more robust phylogenies.

The systematic layout presented here is according to Newell's 1965 classification based on hinge teeth morphology. There exists no robust phylogeny, and due to the plethora of fossil lineages, DNA sequence data is only of limited use should the subclasses turn out to be paraphyletic. The monophyly of the Anomalodesmata is especially disputed, but this is of less consequence as that group does not include higher-level prehistoric taxa. It is, however, currently accepted that Anomalodesmata resides within the subclass Heterodonta. [cite journal
journal=Invertebrate Biology
pages=271–324
title=On bivalve phylogeny: a high-level analysis of the Bivalvia (Mollusca) based on combined morphology and DNA sequence data
last=Giribet
first=Gonzalo
coauthors=Ward Wheeler
volume=121
issue=4
date=2002
doi=10.1111/j.1744-7410.2002.tb00132.x
] [cite journal
journal=Zoologica Scripta
pages=587–606
title=A molecular phylogeny of heterodont bivalves (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Heterodonta): new analyses of 18S and 28S rRNA genes
last=Taylor
first=John
coauthors=Suzanne Williams
volume=36
issue=6
date=2007
doi=10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00299.x
] [cite journal
journal=Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
pages=395-420
title=Reconstructing the Anomalodesmata (Mollusca:Bivalvia): morphology and molecules
last=Harper
first=Elizabeth
coauthors=Hermann Dreyer and Gerhard Steiner
volume=148
issue=3
date=2006
doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.2006.00260.x
]

Subclass Palaeotaxodonta
*Order NuculoidaSubclass Cryptodonta
*†Praecardioida
*SolemyoidaSubclass Pteriomorphia (oysters, mussels, etc)
*Arcoida
*†Cyrtodontoida
*Mytiloida
*Ostreoida - formerly included in Pterioida
*†Praecardioida
*PterioidaSubclass Paleoheterodonta
*†Trigonioida
*Unionoida (typical freshwater mussels)
*†ModiomorphaSubclass Heterodonta (typical clams, cockles, rudists, etc)
*†Cycloconchidae
*†Hippuritoida
*†Lyrodesmatidae
*Myoida
*†Redoniidae
*VeneroidaSubclass Anomalodesmata
*Pholadomyoida

There also exists an alternative systematic scheme according to gill morphology (Franc 1960). This distinguishes between Protobranchia, Filibranchia, and Eulamellibranchia. The first corresponds to Newell's Palaeotaxodonta + Cryptodonta, the second to his Pteriomorphia, and the last contains all other groups. In addition, Franc separated the Septibranchia from his eulamellibranchs, but this would seem to make the latter paraphyletic.

Anatomy

The shapes of bivalve shells vary greatly - some are rounded and globular, others are flattened and plate-like, while still others, have become greatly elongated in order to aid burrowing. The shipworms of the family Teredinidae have greatly elongated bodies, but the shell valves are much reduced and restricted to the anterior end of the body, where they function as burrowing organs, allowing the animal to dig tunnels through wood. ["Description" in [http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:OyzesLnucFUJ:www.marine.csiro.au/crimp/nimpis/spSummaryPDF.asp%3Ftxa%3D10036+teredo+burrowing&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3] ]

Nervous system

The sedentary habit of the bivalves has led to the development of a simpler nervous system than in other molluscs - so simple, in fact, that there is no brain. In all but the simplest forms the neural ganglia are united into two cerebropleural ganglia either side of the oesophagus. The pedal ganglia, controlling the foot, are at its base, and the visceral ganglia (which can be quite large in swimming bivalves) under the posterior adductor muscle. [http://el.erdc.usace.army.mil/zebra/zmis/zmishelp4/nervous_system_and_sense_organs.htm Nervous System and Sense Organs ] ] These ganglia are both connected to the cerebropleural ganglia by nerve fibres. There may also be siphonal ganglia in bivalves with a long siphon.

enses

The sensory organs of bivalves are not well developed, and are largely a function of the posterior mantle margins. The organs are usually tentacles and most are typically mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors.

Scallops have complex eyes with a lens and retina, but most other bivalves have much simpler eyes, if any. There are also light-sensitive cells in all bivalves, that can detect shadows falling on the animal. [http://el.erdc.usace.army.mil/zebra/zmis/zmishelp4/nervous_system_and_sense_organs.htm Nervous System and Sense Organs ] ]

In the septibranchs the inhalant siphon is surrounded by vibration-sensitive tentacles for detecting prey. [In [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1981RSPTB.294..413A "an analysis of the evolution of the septibranch condition"] ]

Statocysts within the organism help the bivalve to sense its orientation, which can then be corrected if need be. ["a statocyst..." in [http://www.manandmollusc.net/advanced_introduction/moll101pelecypoda.html] ]

Muscles

The muscular system is comprised of the posterior and anterior adductor muscles, although the anterior may be reduced or even lost in some species.

The paired anterior and posterior pedal retractor muscles operate the animal's foot. In some bivalves, such as oysters and scallops, these retractors are absent.

Circulation

Bivalves have an open circulatory system that bathes the organs in hemolymph.

Mantle and shell

In bivalves the mantle, a thin membrane surrounding the body, secretes the main shell valves, ligament and hinge teeth, the mantle lobes secreting the valves and the mantle crest the other parts. The mantle is attached to the shell by the mantle retractor muscles at the pallial line. In some bivalves the mantle edges fuse to form siphons, which take in and expel water for suspension feeding purposes.

The shell is composed of two calcareous valves, which are made of either calcite (as with, e.g. oysters) or both calcite and aragonite, usually with the aragonite forming an inner layer, as with the pterioida. The outermost layer is the periostracum, composed of a horny organic substance. This forms the familiar coloured layer on the shell. ["The shell of bivalve molluscs" in [http://paleo.cortland.edu/tutorial/Bivalves/bivalvia.htm] ] The shell is added to in two ways - at the open edge, and by a gradual thickening throughout the animal's life.

The shell halves are held together at the animal's dorsum by the ligament, which is composed of the tensilium and resilium. The ligament opens the shells.

Reproduction

The sexes are usually separate, but some hermaphroditism is known. Bivalves practice external fertilisation.

Typically the marine bivalve will start life as a trochophore, later becoming a veliger. Freshwater bivalves have a different life cycle: they become a glochidium, which attaches to any firm surface to avoid the danger of being swept downsteam. Glochidia can become serious pests of fish.

Behaviour

The radical structure of the bivalves affects their behaviour in several ways. the most significant is the use of the closely-fitting valves as a defence against predation and, in intertidal species such as mussels, drying out. The entire animal can be contained within the shell, which is held shut by the powerful adductor muscles. This defence is difficult to overcome except by specialist predators such as the Starfish and Oystercatcher.

Feeding

Most bivalves are filter feeders (although some have taken up scavenging and predation), extracting organic matter from the sea in which they live. Nephridia remove the waste material. Buried bivalves feed by extending a siphon to the surface (indicated by the presence of a pallial sinus, the size of which is proportional to the burrowing depth, and represented by their hinge teeth).

Feeding types

There are four feeding types, defind by their gill structure. The Protobranchs use their ctenida solely for respiration, and the labial palps catch their food. The filibranchs and lamellibranchs trap the food with a mucous coating on the ctenida; the filibranchs and lamellibranchs are differentiated by the way the ctenida are joined. Finally, the septibranchs possess a septum across the mantle cavity, which pumps in food.

Movement

Razor shells ("Ensis" spp.) can dig themselves into the sand with great speed to escape predation. Scallops can swim to escape an enemy, clapping their valves together to create a jet of water. Cockles can use their foot to leap from danger. However these methods can quickly exhaust the animal. In the razor shells the siphons can break off only to grow back later.

Defensive secretions

The file shells (Limidae) can produce a noxious secretion when threatened, and the fan shells of the same family have a unique, acid-producing organ.

Comparison to Brachiopods

Bivalves are laterally combined and have a shell composed of two valves. The valved shell makes them superficially similar to brachiopods, but the construction of the shell is completely different in the two groups: in brachiopods, the two valves are on the upper and lower surfaces of the body, while in bivalves, they are on the left and right sides.

Bivalves appeared late in the Cambrian explosion and came to dominate over brachiopods during the Palaeozoic; indeed, by the end-Permian extinction, bivalves were undergoing a huge radiation in numbers while brachiopods (along with around 95% of all species) were devastated.

It had long been considered that bivalves are better adapted to aquatic life than the brachiopods were, causing brachiopods to be out-competed and relegated to minor niches in later fossil strata. In fact, these taxa even appeared in textbooks as an example of replacement by competition. Evidence adduced for this included use of an energetically-efficient ligament-muscle system for opening valves, requiring less food to subsist. Lately, however, this interpretation of the interaction between brachiopods and bivalves has been largely exploded. It seems instead that the reason for the prominence of bivalves over brachiopods has to do with chance disparities in their response to extinction events. [cite journal
journal=Paleobiology
pages=383–396
title=Clams and Brachiopods-Ships that Pass in the Night
last=Gould
first=Stephen
authorlink=Stephen Jay Gould
coauthors=C. Bradford Calloway
volume=6
issue=4
date=Autumn, 1980
url=http://www.jstor.org/pss/2400538
]

References

* Franc, A. (1960): Classe de Bivalves. "In:" Grassé, Pierre-Paul: "Traite de Zoologie" 5/II.
* Newell, N.D. (1969): [Bivalvia systematics] . "In:" Moore, R.C.: "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology" Part N.
* cite journal
pages=1119–1127
title=Bivalve Systematics During the 20th Century
author=Jay A. Schneider
volume=75
issue=6
month=Nov
year=2001
doi=10.1666/0022-3360(2001)075<1119:BSDTC>2.0.CO;2
journal=Journal of Paleontology

External links

* [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/ Museum of Paleontology] - Palaeontology from the University of California, Berkeley
* [http://www.wooster.edu/geology/Bioerosion/Bioerosion.html Bioerosion website at The College of Wooster]


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