Students are in the midst of Unit 4 Molluscs busily learning about
the different classes of Molluscs and trying to learn a variety of sea
shells. Students have learned the basics about sea shells
- The shells found on the beach are from dead organisms.
- Any mollusc that has a shell, makes it shell.
- Sea shells are made of calcium carbonate.
- Shells are smooth on the inside because slimy molluscs don't want to
rub their soft bodies on something rough. If they are smooth on the
outside, then the mollusc also wears its body on the outside of its
shell.

Today's
cool mollusc was the chiton, an odd mollusc that has 8 overlapping
plates held together by its soft squishy mantle, and the plates come
apart when the animal dies. Chitons are built like armored cars and have
great suction to stay on the rocky coast in waves and storms. They
spend their days sliming around scraping algae. When pulled off a rock,
it can roll into a ball to protect its squishy parts.
More info can be found here
Students
also learned the four major classes of bivalves - clams, mussels,
oysters, and scallops. Bivalves have 2 shells and 2 siphons, as well as
adductor muscles to help keep their shells from opening for hungry
predators. Bivalves include some of the more well know shellfish like
scallops, clams, oysters, and scallops as well as a few like jingles,
ark shells, and cockles. Pictured to the right are a clam (tan), oyster
(grey), and mussel (black).
Mussels make byssal threads
for attaching (so do ark shells and jingle shells) and scallops have
eyespots to see predators. Oysters make cement to stick together and
clams have a powerful foot for digging down and hiding.
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