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         Mollusca:     more books (100)
  1. A History of British Mollusca, and Their Shells, by E. Forbes and S. Hanley by Edward Forbes, Sylvanus Charles T. Hanley, 2010-02-22
  2. Guide to the Systematic Distribution of Mollusca in the British Museum by British Museum Dept of Zoology, 2010-03
  3. Economic mollusca of Acadia by W F Ganong, 2010-06-19
  4. List Of Marine Mollusca - Comprising The Quaternary Fossils And Recent Forms From American Localities Between Cape Hatteras And Cape Roque Including The Bermudas. by William Healey Dall, 2010-06-04
  5. Hand list of Mollusca in the Indian Museum, Calcutta by Geoffrey Nevill, 2010-09-08
  6. Desmoinesian Brachiopoda and Mollusca from southwest Missouri (The University of Missouri studies) by Richard David Hoare, 1961
  7. Mollusca by Paul Pelseneer, 2010-05-14
  8. Mollusca--II. (Trochomorphidae--Janellidae) by Gerard Kalshoven Gude, 2010-05-14
  9. Mollusca. Testacellidae and Zonitidae by William Thomas Blanford, 2010-08-18
  10. British Conchology (Volume 3); Or, an Account of the Mollusca Which Now Inhabit the British Isles and the Surrounding Seas by John Gwyn Jeffreys, 2010-01-13
  11. Kaestner - Lehrbuch der speziellen Zoologie I/3: Band I: Wirbellose Tiere. Teil 3: Mollusca, Sipunculida, Echiurida, Annelida, Onychophora, Tardigrada, Pentastomida (German Edition)
  12. The edible Mollusca of Great Britain and Ireland. With recipes for cooking them by M S Lovell, 2010-08-01
  13. A monograph of the freshwater univalve mollusca of the United States, including notices of species in other parts of North America by Samuel Stehman Haldeman, 2010-08-04
  14. On the Marine Mollusca of Maderia; With Descriptions of Thirty-Five New Species and an Index-List of All Known Sea-Dweling Species of That Island by Robert Boog Watson, 2010-01-11

81. MOLLUSCA
mollusca. Subphylum Aculifera. Class Polyplacophora (Chitons). Aplacophora.Subphylum Conchifera. Class Gastropoda (Gastropods). Bivalvia (Bivalves).
http://www.il-st-acad-sci.org/kingdom/anim005.html
MOLLUSCA Subphylum: Aculifera Class: Polyplacophora (Chitons) Aplacophora Subphylum: Conchifera Class: Gastropoda (Gastropods) Bivalvia (Bivalves) Scaphopoda (Scaphopods) Cephalopoda (Cephalopods) Kingdoms Project ISAS homepage Armando G. Amador Last update: Tuesday, 01 June, 1999 07:39:58 AM

82. NMGW | BioSyB | Mollusca
There are six classes of mollusca Gastropoda, includes species frommarine, freshwater and terrestrial environments (including slugs),;
http://www.nmgw.ac.uk/biosyb/mollusca/index.en.shtml
Choose a Museum... Museum of Welsh Life Roman Legionary Museum Turner House Gallery Big Pit: National Mining Museum of Wales Museum of the Welsh Woollen Industry Welsh Slate Museum Segontium Roman Museum Choose a Subject... Archaeology Art Geology Industry Social and Cultural History Library Education Cymraeg NMGW Home BioSyB Home Introduction ... Shop online at Wales-Direct.com
Introduction
Molluscs are an ancient group of animals which originated during the Palaeozoic era some 500 million years ago. They are the second largest phylum of animals and can be recognised as they usually have a shell protecting the soft body. There are an estimated 80,000 described species, with many species still undescribed. There are six classes of Mollusca:
  • Gastropoda, includes species from marine, freshwater and terrestrial environments (including slugs), Bivalvia (mussels, oysters), Cephalopoda (octopus, squid, cuttlefish), Scaphopoda (tusk shells), Amphineura (chitons), Aplacophora - are mainly fossil, but one genus has been found living in deep ocean muds.
People who work on Molluscs are either 'Malacologists' on 'Conchologists'. Malacology is the study of the whole animal, whereas Conchology is the study of their shells.

83. Marinebioprospecting.net (publications : Mollusca)
Publications by Robert J Capon mollusca (x1). Marine Publications, 1984. Rhodophyta.Chlorophyta, Cyanobacteria. mollusca. Tunicata. Stereochemistry, Microbes,
http://www.marinebioprospecting.net/html/pubs_mollusca.html
Publications by Robert J Capon : Mollusca
Marine Publications
Metabolites of the pulmonate Siphonaria lessoni J. Org. Chem. , 2506-8 (1984), R. J. Capon, D. J. Faulkner. Describes the isolation and characterisation of norpectinatone and the E and Z isomers of a related furanone from the Chilean pulmonate Siphonaria lessoni. Sponges Phaeophyta Rhodophyta Chlorophyta ... Microbes Terrestrial Publications Geochemistry Plants Miscellaneous Synthesis Biology Pheromones CAL ... Miscellaneous Conferences Posters Lectures Created: 18 June 2001
Last modified: 18 June 2001
Authorised by: Head of Chemistry
Maintained by: A/Prof Rob Capon.
Email: r.capon@unimelb.edu.au

84. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
mollusca. PHYLUM PORIFERA CNIDARIA CTENOPHORA PLATYHELMINTHES NEMERTINEA SIPUNCULIDA ANNELIDA ARTHROPODA BRYOZOA
http://library.thinkquest.org/26153/marine/mollusca.htm
Welcome to the ThinkQuest Internet Challenge of Entries
The web site you have requested, Ocean Driven , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Ocean Driven click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
Ocean Driven
click here to view this site
A ThinkQuest Internet Challenge 1999 Entry
Click image for the Site Languages : Site Desciption Join us on a small tour through the Magnificant Atlantic Ocean, pausing momentarily to look at the vast diversity of species of plants and animals (with a description of the most common and well known species), the habitat in which they live (providing detailed information of both the biotic and abiotic factors together with a description of the zones the ocean is divided into) and also to explore the paranormal activities of the Bermuda Triangle and the legend of Atlantis (proffering evidence for and against the existence of both thereby succesfully debating these subjects). We aim to provide information about the Atlantic which all people in different walks of life can use especially for research for school projects and similar undertakings.
Students Schalk Uitsig Highschool
South Africa Robert Akasia Highschool
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85. Mollusc : ËÍ·ÐàÅ
Porifera / Cnidaria / Platyhelminthes / mollusca Annelida / Arthropoda / Echinodermata/ Chordata an error occurred while processing this directive
http://www.talaythai.com/marine_animal/mollusc/mollusca.shtml
à»ç¹ËÍ´֡´Óº¾ì·Õèà¤Â¤Ô´ÇèÒÊÙ­¾Ñ¹¸Øìä»áÅéǵÑé§áµèÂؤ Devonian (400 ÅéÒ¹»Õ·ÕèáÅéÇ) áµèàÁ×èÍ 45 »Õ¡è͹ÁÕ¤¹¾ºÍÒÈÑÂÍÂÙèã¹·ÐàÅÅÖ¡ 3,600 àÁµ à»ç¹ËÍÂËÒÂÒ¡¾Ç¡àÒäÁèÁÕâÍ¡Òʾºà¢Òá¹è
Porifera
Cnidaria Platyhelminthes / Mollusca
Annelida
Arthropoda Echinodermata Chordata [an error occurred while processing this directive]

86. UCSC Biology 150/Mollusca
Phylum mollusca. Polyplacophora; Conchiferans Monoplacophora; Gastropoda; Bivalvia;Scaphopoda; Cephalopoda. Mollusc Images. Back to the List of Invertebrate Phyla.
http://www.biology.ucsc.edu/classes/bio136/molluscs/mollusca.html
Phylum: Mollusca

87. UCSC Biology 150: Mollusca/Monoplacophora
Phylum mollusca / Class Monoplacophora. ©spineless productionsinc. Back to the mollusca Table of Contents.
http://www.biology.ucsc.edu/classes/bio136/molluscs/monoplacophora/monoplacophor
Phylum: Mollusca / Class: Monoplacophora
©spineless productions inc.
Back to the Mollusca Table of Contents

88. Parasitic Mollusca By Felix Lorenz
Parasitic mollusca An overview to some families with parasitic lifestrategiesin the phylum mollusca by Felix Lorenz (Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen)
http://www.cowries.info/shell/para/para.html
Parasitic Mollusca
An overview to some families with parasitic life-strategies in the phylum Mollusca
by Felix Lorenz (Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen) Modern parasitology can be divided in three mainstream disciplines, each of which have their starting point from the hosts involved: the first has a medical approach as it dwells upon those types of parasitism causing disease in humans. The others study those types of parasitism causing economical damage, that is disease to domestic animals and plants. The parasites involved are either Protozoans, worms in the widest sense (Plathelminthes, Nemathelminthes), and certain Arthropod families.
While there is a wide range of literature dealing with the life-strategies of these groups, no monographic work has ever been published on the Mollusca as a phylum bearing a wide range of parasitic species and an even wider range of strategies. The phylum Mollusca consists of approximately 150.000 species. There are eight classes:
  • Caudofoedata and
  • Solenogastres (these two are also known as Worm-Molluscs)
  • Polyplacophora (Chitons)
  • Monoplacophora (a small group of archaic deep water snails of limpet-like shape)
  • Gastropoda (Snails)
  • Bivalves (Mussels)
  • Scaphopoda (Elephant-Tusks)
  • Cephalopoda (Squids and Nautilus).
  • 89. Phylum Mollusca
    Phylum mollusca Overview. Cool Cephalopod Vids; Sex and the Giant Squid. Phylummollusca. The Cephalopod Home Page (cool). Octoplay. Ammonites.
    http://cas.bellarmine.edu/tietjen/images/phylum_mollusca.htm
    Phylum Mollusca
  • Overview Cool Cephalopod Vids Sex and the Giant Squid Phylum Mollusca The Cephalopod Home Page ( cool Octoplay Ammonites

  • Class Bivalvia
    Class Bivalvia
    Class Amphinuria
    Class Gastropoda
    Class Gastropoda Class Cephalopoda
    Class Cephalopoda
    Class Scaphopoda (Another pix is here
    Class Monoplacophora ( Neopilina ; Another pix is here

    90. Mollusca
    mollusca. Molluscs are a very successful group of animals, includingsnails, clams, mussels, squid and octopi. Some of these may
    http://www.iverna.com/projects/animalkingdom/mollusca.htm
    Iverna Gardens Montessori Nursery School
    Directress: Felicity Marrian
    Home Prospectus Projects Administration ... FAQs
    Animal kingdom Up Protozoa Porifera Coelenterata ... Echinodermata [ Mollusca ] Annelida Arthropoda Chordata Mollusca Molluscs are a very successful group of animals, including snails, clams, mussels, and squid. Some of these don't seem very similar, and it was a long time before the likeness was recognised. They live in all kinds of habitats, from deep ocean trenches to sea beaches, in fresh water and on land. Two of the classes of molluscs are the cephalopods (which includes octopuses and squid) and the gastropods (including snails and nudibranch sea slugs). Cephalopods can be the biggest, as well as the cleverest, invertebrate animals. Octopuses in zoos have learned to open jars and take apart Lego boxes to get food from inside. This stops them from getting bored with nothing to do all day. Giant squid Architeuthis , are known to grow up to 21m (70ft) long, and there may be larger ones that humans have never seen. Cephalopods can swim very fast using a kind of jet propulsion. They all have well developed eyes; the giant squid has the largest eyes in the animal kingdom, 40cm (15in) across. They also have big brains and lots of tentacles with suckers for holding onto prey to eat or anything else that interests them. They have sacs full of ink in their bodies that they can squirt out to make a smokescreen so their enemies can't see, and they can change the colour of their skin to blend in with any part of the sea bed or to court another cephalopod.

    91. Z250 (2002) - Sipuncula Mollusca Clade
    Zoology 250 Clades for SIPUNCULA mollusca. PHYLUM mollusca Tree andtraits from Nielson 1994 p. 111, and Brusca Brusca 1990 p. 762.
    http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/courses.hp/zool250/Clades/clade08-Mollusca.htm

    92. Phylum Mollusca
    Phylum mollusca. Sensitivity and Feeling. Links. Links, Phylum mollusca a good brief introduction to the Molluscs. The Living World
    http://www.palaeos.com/Invertebrates/Molluscs/Mollusca.htm
    Palæos: Mollusca INVERTEBRATES Mollusca
    Home
    Palaeont-
    ology
    Evolution ... Invertebrates
    Phylum Mollusca
    Mollusca Home
    Introduction

    Physiology

    Molluscan Diversity
    ...
    links
    Mollusca
    Mollusc Phylogeny

    Shell Morphology

    Cladogram

    Glossary
    ... References The Molluscs are a large and diverse group of soft-bodied unsegmented animals. Nearly 130,000 recent species are known, and some 35,000 fossil species. They include many familiar animals, like snails, clams, squid, octopii, etc, as well as otehrs not so well known. They range in size from microscopic forms to the giant squid (Architeuthis), and have a long and venerable history appearing during earliest Cambrian time, if not before.
    Physiology
    All Molluscs possess some or all of the following characteristics:
    • a muscular fleshy foot which with gastropods (snails) is used to crawl along with but in cephalopods is modified into tentacles a visceral mass containing the digstive, excretory, and reproductive organs a mantle , usually two folds that enclose the gills or lungs, and also secretes the protective shell a radula , a tongue-like feeding organ, essentially a sort of built-in saw equipped with rows of microscopic teeth that is incredibly effective at scraping food off hard surfaces or grinding through any substance (some carnivirous snails are able to bore a whole through the shells of other molluscs) a special respiratory gill (the ctenidium a shell made of calcium carbonate. This fossilises easily, which explains the rich fossils record the molluscs possess.

    93. Florida Nature: Mollusca - (molusks)
    mollusca mollusca (molusks). mollusca Taxonomy Species on this site. KingdomMetazoa ((=Animalia) multicellular animals); Phylum mollusca (molusks).
    http://www.floridanature.org/phylum.asp?phylum=Mollusca

    94. Mollusca (snails, Limpets, Mussels, Chitons, Squid, Octopuses, Etc)
    biodiversity explorer. Phylum mollusca (snails, limpets, mussels,chitons, squid, octopuses, etc). Back to Metazoa (animals). Pear
    http://www.museums.org.za/bio/molluscs/
    biodiversity explorer
    Phylum: Mollusca (snails, limpets, mussels, chitons, squid, octopuses, etc)
    Back to Metazoa (animals) Pear Limpet Patella cochlear (photo H.G. Robertson, S.A. Museum). Nudibranch Mandelia mirocornata (Mandeliidae), named after Nelson Mandela Garden snail Helix aspersa (photo H.G. Robertson, S.A. Museum).
    Classification
    • Class: Aplacophora . Worm-shaped deap-sea molluscs without shells. See the Aplacophora Home Page Class: Bivalvia (Bivalves) Class: Cephalopoda (Cephalopods) Class: Gastropoda (Gastropods)
      • Subclass: Prosobranchia (winkles, whelks and limpets)
        • Archaeogastropoda Mesogastropoda Neogastropoda
        Subclass: Opisthobranchia (sea slugs and nudibranchs)
        • Acochlidioidea Cephalaspidea (bubble shells) Runcinoidea Sacoglossa Anaspidea (sea hares) Thecosomata Gymnosomata Notaspidea Nudibranchia (sea slugs). Includes a species recently named after Nelson Mandela called Mandelia mirocornata
        Subclass: Pulmonata (snails, slugs and false limpets)
        • Archaeopulmonata Basommatophora Stylommatophora
        Class: Monoplacophora Class: Polyplacophora (Chitons).

    95. Systematic Palaeontology: The Phylum Mollusca
    Systematic Palaeontology The Phylum mollusca. by. Debbie Langer andChris Paul, University of Liverpool. 2. Overview of the mollusca.
    http://www.earth.man.ac.uk/CAL/products/mollusca.html
    Systematic Palaeontology: The Phylum Mollusca
    by
    Debbie Langer and Chris Paul, University of Liverpool
    This interactive courseware module is intended to introduce first and/or second year students to the basics of invertebrate palaeontology, including definition, basic morphology, mode of life and geological applications of a major group of invertebrate fossils. The module occupies about 10Mb and consists of five units accessed via a main menu. Throughout the module extensive use is made of fossil mollusca images, animations and hot words. Clicking on a hot word leads to the display of a description, definition or more detailed explanation of the word's meaning. Information is presented in a variety of ways, including multiple-choice questions. With these, if an incorrect answer is selected, the reasons why it is incorrect are explained, clues about the correct answer given, and the user asked to try again. When the correct answer is given, a confirming explanation is given and the user allowed to proceed. The units are accessed from this menu.
    1. About this module

    96. Fish Chain
    Search Result. “Japan” First sales of South American caught squid. Japan mollusca Production 2001.09.17. Japan mollusca Production 2001.07.31.
    http://www.fishchain.com/en/contents/news_information/overseas_news/overseas.asp

    97. Fish Chain
    News Categories Search by Fish Types Crustacea - Fish - mollusca - Seaweeds -Shellfish. Korea mollusca Production 2001.03.19. 1.
    http://www.fishchain.com/en/contents/news_information/domestic_news/domestic.asp

    98. Mollusca
    PORIFERA CNIDARIA WORMS mollusca ECHINODERMA ANTHROPODA PISCES AMPHIBIAREPTILIA AVES MAMMALIA mollusca Cephalopoda Gastropoda Pelecypoda
    http://www.wshs.fcps.k12.va.us/academic/science/1project/zoo00/zooper1/zoomol/mo

    99. Mollusk - Wikipedia
    Other languages Español Svenska. Mollusk. (Redirected from mollusca).The mollusks (mollusca) are a large and diverse phylum of
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mollusca
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    Mollusk
    (Redirected from Mollusca The mollusks (Mollusca) are a large and diverse phylum of Animals , including a variety of familiar creatures, well-known for their decorative shells or as sea food. These range from tiny snails and clams to the octopus and squid (which are some of the most intelligent invertebrates). The giant squid , is the largest invertebrate, and except for their larvae and some recently captured juveniles, has never been observed alive. Mollusks are triploblastic protostomes . The principal body cavity is a blood-filled hemocoel, with an actual coelom present but reduced to vestiges around the hearts, gonads, and metanephridia (kidney-like organs). The body is divided into a head, often with eyes or tentacles, a muscular foot and a visceral mass housing the organs. Covering the body is a thick sheet called the

    100. Dictionary: Mollusca
    Thesaurus. Look up this word in the thesaurus mollusca. mollusca. From Webster'sRevised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) web1913 mollusca \Mol*lus ca\, n. pl.
    http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/Mollusca
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    Look up this word in the thesaurus: Mollusca
    Mollusca
    entries found From Webster ... o ]l.) One of the grand ... Mollusca

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