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Radula

The radula (UK: /ˈrædjʊlə/, US: /ˈræʊlə/; plural radulae or radulas)[1] is an anatomical structure used by molluscs for feeding, sometimes compared to a tongue.[2] It is a minutely toothed, chitinous ribbon, which is typically used for scraping or cutting food before the food enters the esophagus. The radula is unique to the molluscs, and is found in every class of mollusc except the bivalves, which instead use cilia, waving filaments that bring minute organisms to the mouth.

Within the gastropods, the radula is used in feeding by both herbivorous and carnivorous snails and slugs. The arrangement of teeth (denticles) on the radular ribbon varies considerably from one group to another.

In most of the more ancient lineages of gastropods, the radula is used to graze, by scraping diatoms and other microscopic algae off rock surfaces and other substrates.

Predatory marine snails such as the Naticidae use the radula plus an acidic secretion to bore through the shell of other molluscs. Other predatory marine snails, such as the Conidae, use a specialized radular tooth as a poisoned harpoon. Predatory pulmonate land slugs, such as the ghost slug, use elongated razor-sharp teeth on the radula to seize and devour earthworms. Predatory cephalopods, such as squid, use the radula for cutting prey.

The introduction of the term "radula" (Latin, "little scraper") is usually attributed to Alexander von Middendorff in 1847.[3]

Components

A typical radula comprises a number of bilaterally-symmetrical self-similar rows of teeth rooted in a radular membrane in the floor of their mouth cavity. Some species have teeth that bend with the membrane as it moves over the odontophore, whereas in other species, the teeth are firmly rooted in place, and the entire radular structure moves as one entity.[4]

Radular membrane

The elastic, delicate radular membrane may be a single tongue, or may split into two (bipartite).[5]

Hyaline shield

See Hyaline shield for more details.

Odontophore

The odontophore is the eversible, fleshy tongue underlying the radular membrane. It controls the organ's protrusion and return. It can be likened to a pulley wheel over which the radular 'string' is pulled.[6]

Flexibility

The radular teeth can generally bend in a sideways direction. In the patellogastropods, though, the teeth lost this ability and became fixed.[6]

Teeth

The radula comprises multiple, identical (or near enough) rows of teeth, fine, flat or spiny outgrowths; often, each tooth in a row (along with its symmetric partner) will have a unique morphology.

Each tooth can be divided into three sections: a base, a shaft, and a cusp. In radulae that just sweep, rather than rasp, the underlying substrate, the shaft and cusp are often continuous and cannot be differentiated.[7]

The teeth often tesselate with their neighbours, and this interlocking serves to make it more difficult to remove them from the radular ribbon.[7]

Radula formulae

 
Radula and individual tooth of the predatory ghost slug, Selenochlamys ysbryda

The number, shape, and specialized arrangement of molluscan teeth in each transverse row is consistent on a radula, and the different patterns can be used as a diagnostic characteristic to identify the species in many cases.

Each row of radular teeth consists of

  • One central or median tooth (or rachidian tooth, rachis tooth)
  • On each side: one or more lateral teeth
  • And then beyond that: one or more marginal teeth.

This arrangement is expressed in a radular tooth formula, with the following abbreviations :

  • R : designates the central tooth or the rachis tooth (in case of lack of central tooth : the zero sign 0)
  • the lateral teeth on each side are expressed by a specific number or D, in case the outer lateral tooth is dominant.
  • the marginal teeth are designated by a specific number or, in case they are in a very large numbers, the infinity symbol ∞
 
Microscopic detail of a docoglossan radula showing the denticles or teeth

This can be expressed in a typical formula such as:

3 + D + 2 + R + 2 + D + 3

This formula means: across the radula there are 3 marginal teeth, 1 dominant lateral tooth, 2 lateral teeth, and one central tooth.

Another formula for describing radulae omits the use of letters and simply gives a sequence of numbers in the order marginal-lateral-rachidian-lateral-marginal, thus:

1-1-1-1-1

This particular formula, which is common to the scaphopods, means one marginal tooth, one lateral tooth, one rachidian tooth, one lateral tooth, and one marginal tooth across the ribbon.[8]

Morphology

The morphology of the radula is related to diet. However, it is not fixed per species; some molluscs can adapt the form of their radular teeth according to which food sources are abundant.[9]

Pointed teeth are best suited to grazing on algal tissue, whereas blunt teeth are preferable if feeding habits entail scraping epiphytes from surfaces.[9]

Use

 
Tracks made by terrestrial gastropods with their radulas, scraping green algae from a surface inside a greenhouse

The radula is used in two main ways: either as a rake, generally to comb up microscopic, filamentous algae from a surface; or as a rasp, to feed directly on a plant.[10] The rhipidoglossan (see below) and, to a lesser extent, the taenigloissan radular types are suited to less strenuous modes of feeding, brushing up smaller algae or feeding on soft forms; molluscs with such radulae are rarely able to feed on leathery or coralline algae. On the other hand, the docoglossan gastropod radula allows a very similar diet to the polyplacophora, feeding primarily on these resistant algae, although microalgae are also consumed by species with these radular types.[10]

The sacoglossans (sea slugs) form an interesting anomaly in that their radula comprises a single row; they feed by sucking on cell contents, rather than rasping at tissue, and most species feed on a single genus or species of alga. Here, the shape of the radular teeth has a close match with the food substrate on which they are used. Triangular teeth are suited to diets of calcified algae, and are also present in radulae used to graze on Caulerpa; in both these cases the cell walls are predominantly composed of xylan. Sabot-shaped teeth – rods with a groove along one side – are associated with diets of crossed-fibrillar cellulose-walled algae, such as the Siphonocladaceae and Cladophorales, whereas blade-shaped teeth are more generalist.[11]

Early molluscs

The first bona fide radula dates to the Early Cambrian,[12] although trace fossils from the earlier Ediacaran have been suggested to have been made by the radula of the organism Kimberella.

A so-called radula from the early Cambrian was discovered in 1974, this one preserved with fragments of the mineral ilmenite suspended in a quartz matrix, and showing similarities to the radula of the modern cephalopod Sepia.[13] However, this was since re-interpreted as Salterella.[14] [/Volborthella?][verification needed]

Based on the bipartite nature of the radular dentition pattern in solenogasters, larval gastropods and larval polyplacophora, it has been postulated that the ancestral mollusc bore a bipartite radula (although the radular membrane may not have been bipartite).[5]

In chitons

Each row of the polyplacophoran radula has two mineralized teeth used to abrade the substrate, and two longer teeth that sweep up any debris. The other 13 teeth on each row do not appear to be involved in feeding.[10]

The teeth of Chaetopleura apiculata comprise fibres surrounded by magnetite, sodium and magnesium.[15]

In gastropods

 
Diagrammatic transverse view of the buccal cavity of a gastropod, showing the radula and how it is used.
The rest of the body of the snail is shown in green. The food is shown in blue. Muscles that control the radula are shown in brown. The surface of the radular ribbon, with numerous teeth, is shown as a zig-zag line
 
Upper right: Mouth of a Planorbarius corneus freshwater snail with the radula visible.

Anatomy and method of functioning

The mouth of the gastropods is located below the anterior part of the mollusc. It opens into a pocket-like buccal cavity, containing the radular sac, an evaginated pocket in the posterior wall of this cavity.

The radula apparatus consists of two parts :

  • the cartilaginous base (the odontophore), with the odontophore protractor muscle, the radula protractor muscle and the radula retractor muscle.
  • the radula itself, with its longitudinal rows of chitinous and recurved teeth, the cuticula.

The odontophore is movable and protrusible, and the radula itself is movable over the odontophore. Through this action the radular teeth are being erected. The tip of the odontophore then scrapes the surface, while the teeth cut and scoop up the food and convey the particles through the esophagus to the digestive tract.

In a flexoglossate radula (the primitive condition), the teeth flex outwards to the sides as they round the tip of the odontophore, before flexing back inwards. In the derived stereoglossate condition, the teeth do not flex.[6]

These actions continually wear down the frontal teeth. New teeth are continuously formed at the posterior end of the buccal cavity in the radular sac. They are slowly brought forward to the tip by a slow forward movement of the ribbon, to be replaced in their turn when they are worn out.

Teeth production is rapid (some species produce up to five rows per day). The radular teeth are produced by odontoblasts, cells in the radular sac.

The number of teeth present depends on the species of mollusc and may number more than 100,000. Large numbers of teeth in a row (actually v-shaped on the ribbon in many species) is presumed to be a more primitive condition, but this may not always be true.

The greatest number of teeth per row is found in Pleurotomaria (deep water gastropods in an ancient lineage) which has over 200 teeth per row (Hyman, 1967).

The shape and arrangement of the radular teeth is an adaptation to the feeding regimen of the species.

The teeth of the radula are lubricated by the mucus of the salivary gland, just above the radula. Food particles are trapped into this sticky mucus, smoothing the progress of food into the esophagus.

Certain gastropods use their radular teeth to hunt other gastropods and bivalve molluscs, scraping away the soft parts for ingestion. Cone shells have a single radular tooth, that can be thrust like a harpoon into its prey, releasing a neurotoxin.

Seven basic types

  • The docoglossan or stereoglossan radula: in each row there is one usually small central tooth, flanked by 1–3 laterals (with the outer one dominant) and a few (3 at the most) hooked marginals. The central tooth may even be absent. The teeth are fixed in a stiff position on the radular ribbon. This is the most primitive radular type, and we could assume it represents the plesiomorphic condition i.e., the primitive character state, that is taken from an ancestor without change, such as would be possessed by the earliest molluscs (Eogastropoda, also Polyplacophora; limpet families Patellidae, Lottiidae, Lepetidae). The radula operates like a chain of 'shovels', and the rigid structure operates like a rasp, scraping at hardened macroalgae.[10] Accordingly, docoglossan radulae are often hardened by biomineralization.[10] Spaces between the teeth make the radula ill-suited to collecting microalgae.[10]
    • Formula: 3 + D + 2 + R + 2 + D + 3
    • Or: 3 + D + 2 + 0 + 2 + D + 3
  • Rhipidoglossan radula: a large central and symmetrical tooth, flanked on each side by several (usually five) lateral teeth and numerous closely packed flabellate marginals, called uncini (typical examples: Vetigastropoda, Neritomorpha). This already marks an improvement over the simple docoglossan state.[clarification needed] These radulae generally operate like 'brooms', brushing up loose microalgae.[10]
    • Formula: ∞ + 5 + R + 5 + ∞
    • In case of a dominant lateral tooth: ∞ + D + 4 + R + 4 + D + ∞
 
Radula (magn. 400x) of the gray garden slug (Deroceras laeve) showing the chitinous lingual ribbons with numerous inward-pointing denticles
  • Hystrichoglossan radula: each row with lamellate and hooked lateral teeth and hundreds of uniform marginal teeth that are tufted at their ends (typical example : Pleurotomariidae).
    • The radular formula of, for example, Pleurotomaria (Entemnotrochus) rumphii is : ∞. 14. 27. 1. 27. 14. ∞
  • Taenioglossan radula: seven teeth in each row: one middle tooth, flanked on each side by one lateral and two marginal teeth (characteristic of the majority of the Caenogastropoda). These operate like 'rakes', scraping algae and gathering the resultant detritus.[10]
    • Formula : 2 + 1 + R + 1 + 2
  • Ptenoglossan radula: rows with no central tooth but a series of several uniform, pointed marginal teeth (typical example : Epitonioidea).
    • Formula : n + 0 + n
  • Stenoglossan or rachiglossan radula: each row has one central tooth and one lateral tooth on each side (or no lateral teeth in some cases) (most Neogastropoda).
    • Formula : 1 + R + 1
    • Or : 0 + R + 0
  • Toxoglossan radula: The middle teeth are very small or completely absent. Each row has only two teeth of which only one is in use at a time. These grooved teeth are very long and pointed, with venom channels (neurotoxins) and barbs, and are not firmly fixed to the basal plate. The teeth can therefore be individually transferred to the proboscis and ejected like a harpoon into the prey (typical example : Conoidea).
    • formula : 1 + 0 + 1

These radular types show the evolution in the gastropods from herbivorous to carnivorous feeding patterns. Scraping algae requires many teeth, as is found in the first three types.

Carnivorous gastropods generally need fewer teeth, especially laterals and marginals. The ptenoglossan radula is situated between the two extremes and is typical for those gastropods which are adapted to a life as parasites on polyps.

 
A portion of the radula of Marstonia comalensis showing outer marginal teeth (on the left), inner marginal teeth and immediately next to them lateral teeth, central teeth. Scale bar is 20 μm.
 
Inner marginal tooth. Scale bar is 10 μm.
 
Lateral teeth. Scale bar is 10 μm.
 
Central teeth. Scale bar is 10 μm.

Gastropods with no radula

The streptaxid Careoradula perelegans is the only known terrestrial gastropod which has no radula.[16]

Some marine gastropods lack a radula. For example, all species of sea slugs in the family Tethydidae have no radula,[17] and a clade of dorids (the Porostomata)[18] as well as all species of the genus Clathromangelia (family Clathurellidae)[19] likewise lack the organ. The radula has been lost a number of times in the Opisthobrancha.[20]

In cephalopods

 
Radular teeth of the squid Illex illecebrosus

Most cephalopods possess a radula as well as a horny chitinous beak,[21] although the radula is reduced in octopuses and absent in Spirula.[22]: 110 

The cephalopod radula rarely fossilizes: it has been found in around one in five ammonite genera, and is rarer still in non-ammonoid forms. Indeed, it is known from only three non-ammonoid taxa in the Palaeozoic era: Michelinoceras, Paleocadmus, and an unnamed species from the Soom Shale.[23]

In solenogasters

The solenogaster radula is akin to that of other molluscs, with regularly spaced rows of teeth produced at one end and shed at the other. The teeth within each row are similar in shape, and get larger in size towards the outer extreme. A number of teeth occur on each row; this number is usually constant but prone to small variations from row to row; indeed, it increases over time, with teeth being added to the middle of rows by addition or by the division of existing teeth.[5] A number of radular formulae are exhibited by this class: 1:0:1 is most common, followed by 0:1:0 and n:0:n.[5]

In caudofoveates

The radula of the caudofoveate Falcidens is unlike the conchiferan radula. It has a reduced form, comprising just a single row of teeth. On each side of the apparatus, two teeth appear at the front; behind these, the third teeth fuse to form a mineralized axial plate. Bars occur posterior to this, behind which a sheath encircles the apparatus. The rear of the apparatus consists of a large plate, the 'radular cone'.[24] The unusual form of the radula is accompanied by an unusual purpose: rather than rasping substrates, Falcidens uses its teeth as pincers to grasp prey items.[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Radula definitions". wordswarm.net. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  2. ^ "All About Slugs".
  3. ^ (in German) von Middendorff A. T. (1847). Beiträge zu einer malacozoologia rossica: Chitonen. St. Petersburg, 151 pp. + plates. p .54.
  4. ^ Padilla, D. K. (1985). "Structural resistance of algae to herbivores". Marine Biology. 90: 103–109. doi:10.1007/BF00428220. S2CID 80717511.
  5. ^ a b c d Scheltema, A. H.; Kerth, K.; Kuzirian, A. M. (2003). "Original molluscan radula: Comparisons among Aplacophora, Polyplacophora, Gastropoda, and the Cambrian fossil Wiwaxia corrugata". Journal of Morphology. 257 (2): 219–245. doi:10.1002/jmor.10121. PMID 12833382. S2CID 32940079.
  6. ^ a b c Guralnick, R.; Smith, K. (1999). "Historical and biomechanical analysis of integration and dissociation in molluscan feeding, with special emphasis on the true limpets (Patellogastropoda: Gastropoda)". Journal of Morphology. 241 (2): 175–195. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199908)241:2<175::AID-JMOR7>3.0.CO;2-0. PMID 10420163. S2CID 14497120.
  7. ^ a b Hickman, C. S. (1980). "Gastropod Radulae and the Assessment of Form in Evolutionary Paleontology". Paleobiology. 6 (3): 276–294. doi:10.1017/s0094837300006801. JSTOR 2400346. S2CID 89455588.
  8. ^ Shimek, Ronald; Steiner, Gerhard (1997). "Chapter 6". Microscopic anatomy of invertebrates. Vol. 6B: Mollusca II. Wiley-Liss, Inc. p. 748.
  9. ^ a b Padilla, D. K. (April 1998). "Inducible Phenotypic Plasticity of the Radula in Lacuna (Gastropoda: Littorinidae)" (PDF). The Veliger. 41 (2): 201–204.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Steneck, R. S.; Watling, L. (1982). "Feeding capabilities and limitation of herbivorous molluscs: A functional group approach". Marine Biology. 68 (3): 299–319. doi:10.1007/BF00409596. S2CID 84207061.
  11. ^ Jensen, K. R. (1993). "Morphological adaptations and plasticity of radular teeth of the Sacoglossa (= Ascoglossa) (Mollusca: Opisthobranchia) in relation to their food plants". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 48 (2): 135–155. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1993.tb00883.x.
  12. ^ Butterfield, N.J. (2008). "An early Cambrian radula". Journal of Paleontology. 82 (3): 543–554. doi:10.1666/07-066.1. S2CID 86083492.
  13. ^ Firby, J. B.; Durham, J. W. (1 November 1974). "Molluscan Radula from Earliest Cambrian". Journal of Paleontology. 48 (6): 1109–1338. ISSN 0022-3360.
  14. ^ Yochelson, E. L.; Kisselev, G. N. (2003). "Early Cambrian Salterella and Volborthella (Phylum Agmata) re-evaluated". Lethaia. 36 (1): 8–20. doi:10.1080/00241160310001254.
  15. ^ Gordon, L. M.; Joester, D. (2011). "Nanoscale chemical tomography of buried organic–inorganic interfaces in the chiton tooth". Nature. 469 (7329): 194–197. Bibcode:2011Natur.469..194G. doi:10.1038/nature09686. PMID 21228873. S2CID 4430261.
  16. ^ Gerlach, J.; van Bruggen, A. C. (1998). "A first record of a terrestrial mollusc without a radula". Journal of Molluscan Studies. 64 (2): 249–250. doi:10.1093/mollus/64.2.249.
  17. ^ Rudman W. B. (14 October 2002) "http://www.seaslugforum.net/factsheet.cfm?base=tethfimb". Sea Slug Forum, accessed 29 December 2010.
  18. ^ Valdés, A. (2003). "Preliminary Molecular Phylogeny of the Radula-Less Dorids (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia), Based on 16S Mtdna Sequence Data". Journal of Molluscan Studies. 69: 75–80. doi:10.1093/mollus/69.1.75.
  19. ^ Oliverio, M (1995). "The systematics of the radula-less gastropod Clathromangelia (Caenogastropoda, Conoidea)". Zoologica Scripta. 24 (3): 193–201. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.1995.tb00399.x. S2CID 85202876.
  20. ^ "Morphological Parallelism in Opisthobranch Gastropods". Malacologia: 313–327. 1991.
  21. ^ Brusca & Brusca. Invertebrates (2nd ed.).
  22. ^ Wilbur, Karl M.; Clarke, M.R.; Trueman, E.R., eds. (1985), The Mollusca, vol. 12. Paleontology and neontology of Cephalopods, New York: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-728702-7
  23. ^ Gabbott, S. E. (1999). "Orthoconic cephalopods and associated fauna from the late Ordovician Soom Shale Lagerstatte, South Africa". Palaeontology. 42: 123–148. doi:10.1111/1475-4983.00065.
  24. ^ a b Cruz, R.; Lins, U.; Farina, M. (1998). "Minerals of the radular apparatus of Falcidens sp. (Caudofoveata) and the evolutionary implications for the Phylum Mollusca". Biological Bulletin. 194 (2): 224–230. doi:10.2307/1543051. JSTOR 1543051. PMID 28570844.

Further reading

  • Molluscan buccal structures and radula
  • Barker, G. M (2001). The biology of terrestrial molluscs. ISBN 978-0-85199-318-8.
  • Hickman Carole, S (1980). "Gastropod Radulae and the Assessment of Form in Evolutionary Paleontology". Paleobiology. 6 (3): 276–294. doi:10.1017/s0094837300006801. S2CID 89455588.
  • Caron, J.-B.; Scheltema, A.; Schander, C.; Rudkin, D. (2006). "A soft-bodied mollusc with radula from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale" (PDF). Nature. 442 (7099): 159–163. Bibcode:2006Natur.442..159C. doi:10.1038/nature04894. hdl:1912/1404. PMID 16838013. S2CID 4431853.
  • Amélie H. Scheltema; Klaus Kerth; Alan M. Kuzirian (April 2006). "Original molluscan radula: Comparisons among Aplacophora, Polyplacophora, Gastropoda, and the Cambrian fossil Wiwaxia corrugata". Journal of Morphology. 257 (2): 219–245. doi:10.1002/jmor.10121. PMID 12833382. S2CID 32940079. Archived from the original on 16 December 2012.
  • Katsuno, S.; Sasaki, T. (2008). "Comparative Histology of Radula-Supporting Structures in Gastropoda". Malacologia. 50 (1–2): 13–56. doi:10.4002/0076-2997-50.1.13. S2CID 83872024.
  • Lowenstam, H.A. (27 July 1968). "Goethite in Radular Teeth of Recent Marine Gastropods". Science. New Series. 137 (3526): 279–280. doi:10.1126/science.137.3526.279. PMID 17744439. S2CID 40475929.

External links

radula, plant, genus, plant, radula, plural, radulae, radulas, anatomical, structure, used, molluscs, feeding, sometimes, compared, tongue, minutely, toothed, chitinous, ribbon, which, typically, used, scraping, cutting, food, before, food, enters, esophagus, . For the plant genus see Radula plant The radula UK ˈ r ae d j ʊ l e US ˈ r ae dʒ ʊ l e plural radulae or radulas 1 is an anatomical structure used by molluscs for feeding sometimes compared to a tongue 2 It is a minutely toothed chitinous ribbon which is typically used for scraping or cutting food before the food enters the esophagus The radula is unique to the molluscs and is found in every class of mollusc except the bivalves which instead use cilia waving filaments that bring minute organisms to the mouth Within the gastropods the radula is used in feeding by both herbivorous and carnivorous snails and slugs The arrangement of teeth denticles on the radular ribbon varies considerably from one group to another In most of the more ancient lineages of gastropods the radula is used to graze by scraping diatoms and other microscopic algae off rock surfaces and other substrates Predatory marine snails such as the Naticidae use the radula plus an acidic secretion to bore through the shell of other molluscs Other predatory marine snails such as the Conidae use a specialized radular tooth as a poisoned harpoon Predatory pulmonate land slugs such as the ghost slug use elongated razor sharp teeth on the radula to seize and devour earthworms Predatory cephalopods such as squid use the radula for cutting prey The introduction of the term radula Latin little scraper is usually attributed to Alexander von Middendorff in 1847 3 Contents 1 Components 1 1 Radular membrane 1 2 Hyaline shield 1 3 Odontophore 1 4 Flexibility 1 5 Teeth 2 Radula formulae 3 Morphology 4 Use 5 Early molluscs 6 In chitons 7 In gastropods 7 1 Anatomy and method of functioning 7 1 1 Seven basic types 7 2 Gastropods with no radula 8 In cephalopods 9 In solenogasters 10 In caudofoveates 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksComponents EditA typical radula comprises a number of bilaterally symmetrical self similar rows of teeth rooted in a radular membrane in the floor of their mouth cavity Some species have teeth that bend with the membrane as it moves over the odontophore whereas in other species the teeth are firmly rooted in place and the entire radular structure moves as one entity 4 Radular membrane Edit The elastic delicate radular membrane may be a single tongue or may split into two bipartite 5 Hyaline shield Edit See Hyaline shield for more details Odontophore Edit The odontophore is the eversible fleshy tongue underlying the radular membrane It controls the organ s protrusion and return It can be likened to a pulley wheel over which the radular string is pulled 6 Flexibility Edit The radular teeth can generally bend in a sideways direction In the patellogastropods though the teeth lost this ability and became fixed 6 Teeth Edit The radula comprises multiple identical or near enough rows of teeth fine flat or spiny outgrowths often each tooth in a row along with its symmetric partner will have a unique morphology Each tooth can be divided into three sections a base a shaft and a cusp In radulae that just sweep rather than rasp the underlying substrate the shaft and cusp are often continuous and cannot be differentiated 7 The teeth often tesselate with their neighbours and this interlocking serves to make it more difficult to remove them from the radular ribbon 7 Radula formulae Edit Radula and individual tooth of the predatory ghost slug Selenochlamys ysbryda The number shape and specialized arrangement of molluscan teeth in each transverse row is consistent on a radula and the different patterns can be used as a diagnostic characteristic to identify the species in many cases Each row of radular teeth consists of One central or median tooth or rachidian tooth rachis tooth On each side one or more lateral teeth And then beyond that one or more marginal teeth This arrangement is expressed in a radular tooth formula with the following abbreviations R designates the central tooth or the rachis tooth in case of lack of central tooth the zero sign 0 the lateral teeth on each side are expressed by a specific number or D in case the outer lateral tooth is dominant the marginal teeth are designated by a specific number or in case they are in a very large numbers the infinity symbol Microscopic detail of a docoglossan radula showing the denticles or teeth This can be expressed in a typical formula such as 3 D 2 R 2 D 3This formula means across the radula there are 3 marginal teeth 1 dominant lateral tooth 2 lateral teeth and one central tooth Another formula for describing radulae omits the use of letters and simply gives a sequence of numbers in the order marginal lateral rachidian lateral marginal thus 1 1 1 1 1This particular formula which is common to the scaphopods means one marginal tooth one lateral tooth one rachidian tooth one lateral tooth and one marginal tooth across the ribbon 8 Morphology EditThe morphology of the radula is related to diet However it is not fixed per species some molluscs can adapt the form of their radular teeth according to which food sources are abundant 9 Pointed teeth are best suited to grazing on algal tissue whereas blunt teeth are preferable if feeding habits entail scraping epiphytes from surfaces 9 Use Edit Tracks made by terrestrial gastropods with their radulas scraping green algae from a surface inside a greenhouse The radula is used in two main ways either as a rake generally to comb up microscopic filamentous algae from a surface or as a rasp to feed directly on a plant 10 The rhipidoglossan see below and to a lesser extent the taenigloissan radular types are suited to less strenuous modes of feeding brushing up smaller algae or feeding on soft forms molluscs with such radulae are rarely able to feed on leathery or coralline algae On the other hand the docoglossan gastropod radula allows a very similar diet to the polyplacophora feeding primarily on these resistant algae although microalgae are also consumed by species with these radular types 10 The sacoglossans sea slugs form an interesting anomaly in that their radula comprises a single row they feed by sucking on cell contents rather than rasping at tissue and most species feed on a single genus or species of alga Here the shape of the radular teeth has a close match with the food substrate on which they are used Triangular teeth are suited to diets of calcified algae and are also present in radulae used to graze on Caulerpa in both these cases the cell walls are predominantly composed of xylan Sabot shaped teeth rods with a groove along one side are associated with diets of crossed fibrillar cellulose walled algae such as the Siphonocladaceae and Cladophorales whereas blade shaped teeth are more generalist 11 Early molluscs EditThe first bona fide radula dates to the Early Cambrian 12 although trace fossils from the earlier Ediacaran have been suggested to have been made by the radula of the organism Kimberella A so called radula from the early Cambrian was discovered in 1974 this one preserved with fragments of the mineral ilmenite suspended in a quartz matrix and showing similarities to the radula of the modern cephalopod Sepia 13 However this was since re interpreted as Salterella 14 Volborthella verification needed Based on the bipartite nature of the radular dentition pattern in solenogasters larval gastropods and larval polyplacophora it has been postulated that the ancestral mollusc bore a bipartite radula although the radular membrane may not have been bipartite 5 In chitons EditEach row of the polyplacophoran radula has two mineralized teeth used to abrade the substrate and two longer teeth that sweep up any debris The other 13 teeth on each row do not appear to be involved in feeding 10 The teeth of Chaetopleura apiculata comprise fibres surrounded by magnetite sodium and magnesium 15 In gastropods Edit Diagrammatic transverse view of the buccal cavity of a gastropod showing the radula and how it is used The rest of the body of the snail is shown in green The food is shown in blue Muscles that control the radula are shown in brown The surface of the radular ribbon with numerous teeth is shown as a zig zag line Upper right Mouth of a Planorbarius corneus freshwater snail with the radula visible Further information Digestive system of gastropods Anatomy and method of functioning Edit The mouth of the gastropods is located below the anterior part of the mollusc It opens into a pocket like buccal cavity containing the radular sac an evaginated pocket in the posterior wall of this cavity The radula apparatus consists of two parts the cartilaginous base the odontophore with the odontophore protractor muscle the radula protractor muscle and the radula retractor muscle the radula itself with its longitudinal rows of chitinous and recurved teeth the cuticula The odontophore is movable and protrusible and the radula itself is movable over the odontophore Through this action the radular teeth are being erected The tip of the odontophore then scrapes the surface while the teeth cut and scoop up the food and convey the particles through the esophagus to the digestive tract In a flexoglossate radula the primitive condition the teeth flex outwards to the sides as they round the tip of the odontophore before flexing back inwards In the derived stereoglossate condition the teeth do not flex 6 These actions continually wear down the frontal teeth New teeth are continuously formed at the posterior end of the buccal cavity in the radular sac They are slowly brought forward to the tip by a slow forward movement of the ribbon to be replaced in their turn when they are worn out Teeth production is rapid some species produce up to five rows per day The radular teeth are produced by odontoblasts cells in the radular sac The number of teeth present depends on the species of mollusc and may number more than 100 000 Large numbers of teeth in a row actually v shaped on the ribbon in many species is presumed to be a more primitive condition but this may not always be true The greatest number of teeth per row is found in Pleurotomaria deep water gastropods in an ancient lineage which has over 200 teeth per row Hyman 1967 The shape and arrangement of the radular teeth is an adaptation to the feeding regimen of the species The teeth of the radula are lubricated by the mucus of the salivary gland just above the radula Food particles are trapped into this sticky mucus smoothing the progress of food into the esophagus Certain gastropods use their radular teeth to hunt other gastropods and bivalve molluscs scraping away the soft parts for ingestion Cone shells have a single radular tooth that can be thrust like a harpoon into its prey releasing a neurotoxin Seven basic types Edit The docoglossan or stereoglossan radula in each row there is one usually small central tooth flanked by 1 3 laterals with the outer one dominant and a few 3 at the most hooked marginals The central tooth may even be absent The teeth are fixed in a stiff position on the radular ribbon This is the most primitive radular type and we could assume it represents the plesiomorphic condition i e the primitive character state that is taken from an ancestor without change such as would be possessed by the earliest molluscs Eogastropoda also Polyplacophora limpet families Patellidae Lottiidae Lepetidae The radula operates like a chain of shovels and the rigid structure operates like a rasp scraping at hardened macroalgae 10 Accordingly docoglossan radulae are often hardened by biomineralization 10 Spaces between the teeth make the radula ill suited to collecting microalgae 10 Formula 3 D 2 R 2 D 3 Or 3 D 2 0 2 D 3 Rhipidoglossan radula a large central and symmetrical tooth flanked on each side by several usually five lateral teeth and numerous closely packed flabellate marginals called uncini typical examples Vetigastropoda Neritomorpha This already marks an improvement over the simple docoglossan state clarification needed These radulae generally operate like brooms brushing up loose microalgae 10 Formula 5 R 5 In case of a dominant lateral tooth D 4 R 4 D Radula magn 400x of the gray garden slug Deroceras laeve showing the chitinous lingual ribbons with numerous inward pointing denticles Hystrichoglossan radula each row with lamellate and hooked lateral teeth and hundreds of uniform marginal teeth that are tufted at their ends typical example Pleurotomariidae The radular formula of for example Pleurotomaria Entemnotrochus rumphii is 14 27 1 27 14 Taenioglossan radula seven teeth in each row one middle tooth flanked on each side by one lateral and two marginal teeth characteristic of the majority of the Caenogastropoda These operate like rakes scraping algae and gathering the resultant detritus 10 Formula 2 1 R 1 2 Ptenoglossan radula rows with no central tooth but a series of several uniform pointed marginal teeth typical example Epitonioidea Formula n 0 n Stenoglossan or rachiglossan radula each row has one central tooth and one lateral tooth on each side or no lateral teeth in some cases most Neogastropoda Formula 1 R 1 Or 0 R 0 Toxoglossan radula The middle teeth are very small or completely absent Each row has only two teeth of which only one is in use at a time These grooved teeth are very long and pointed with venom channels neurotoxins and barbs and are not firmly fixed to the basal plate The teeth can therefore be individually transferred to the proboscis and ejected like a harpoon into the prey typical example Conoidea formula 1 0 1These radular types show the evolution in the gastropods from herbivorous to carnivorous feeding patterns Scraping algae requires many teeth as is found in the first three types Carnivorous gastropods generally need fewer teeth especially laterals and marginals The ptenoglossan radula is situated between the two extremes and is typical for those gastropods which are adapted to a life as parasites on polyps A portion of the radula of Marstonia comalensis showing outer marginal teeth on the left inner marginal teeth and immediately next to them lateral teeth central teeth Scale bar is 20 mm Inner marginal tooth Scale bar is 10 mm Lateral teeth Scale bar is 10 mm Central teeth Scale bar is 10 mm Gastropods with no radula Edit The streptaxid Careoradula perelegans is the only known terrestrial gastropod which has no radula 16 Some marine gastropods lack a radula For example all species of sea slugs in the family Tethydidae have no radula 17 and a clade of dorids the Porostomata 18 as well as all species of the genusClathromangelia family Clathurellidae 19 likewise lack the organ The radula has been lost a number of times in the Opisthobrancha 20 In cephalopods Edit Radular teeth of the squid Illex illecebrosus Most cephalopods possess a radula as well as a horny chitinous beak 21 although the radula is reduced in octopuses and absent in Spirula 22 110 The cephalopod radula rarely fossilizes it has been found in around one in five ammonite genera and is rarer still in non ammonoid forms Indeed it is known from only three non ammonoid taxa in the Palaeozoic era Michelinoceras Paleocadmus and an unnamed species from the Soom Shale 23 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2008 In solenogasters EditThe solenogaster radula is akin to that of other molluscs with regularly spaced rows of teeth produced at one end and shed at the other The teeth within each row are similar in shape and get larger in size towards the outer extreme A number of teeth occur on each row this number is usually constant but prone to small variations from row to row indeed it increases over time with teeth being added to the middle of rows by addition or by the division of existing teeth 5 A number of radular formulae are exhibited by this class 1 0 1 is most common followed by 0 1 0 and n 0 n 5 In caudofoveates EditThe radula of the caudofoveate Falcidens is unlike the conchiferan radula It has a reduced form comprising just a single row of teeth On each side of the apparatus two teeth appear at the front behind these the third teeth fuse to form a mineralized axial plate Bars occur posterior to this behind which a sheath encircles the apparatus The rear of the apparatus consists of a large plate the radular cone 24 The unusual form of the radula is accompanied by an unusual purpose rather than rasping substrates Falcidens uses its teeth as pincers to grasp prey items 24 See also EditHypostome Subradular organReferences Edit Radula definitions wordswarm net Retrieved 9 October 2009 All About Slugs in German von Middendorff A T 1847 Beitrage zu einer malacozoologia rossica Chitonen St Petersburg 151 pp plates p 54 Padilla D K 1985 Structural resistance of algae to herbivores Marine Biology 90 103 109 doi 10 1007 BF00428220 S2CID 80717511 a b c d Scheltema A H Kerth K Kuzirian A M 2003 Original molluscan radula Comparisons among Aplacophora Polyplacophora Gastropoda and the Cambrian fossil Wiwaxia corrugata Journal of Morphology 257 2 219 245 doi 10 1002 jmor 10121 PMID 12833382 S2CID 32940079 a b c Guralnick R Smith K 1999 Historical and biomechanical analysis of integration and dissociation in molluscan feeding with special emphasis on the true limpets Patellogastropoda Gastropoda Journal of Morphology 241 2 175 195 doi 10 1002 SICI 1097 4687 199908 241 2 lt 175 AID JMOR7 gt 3 0 CO 2 0 PMID 10420163 S2CID 14497120 a b Hickman C S 1980 Gastropod Radulae and the Assessment of Form in Evolutionary Paleontology Paleobiology 6 3 276 294 doi 10 1017 s0094837300006801 JSTOR 2400346 S2CID 89455588 Shimek Ronald Steiner Gerhard 1997 Chapter 6 Microscopic anatomy of invertebrates Vol 6B Mollusca II Wiley Liss Inc p 748 a b Padilla D K April 1998 Inducible Phenotypic Plasticity of the Radula in Lacuna Gastropoda Littorinidae PDF The Veliger 41 2 201 204 a b c d e f g h Steneck R S Watling L 1982 Feeding capabilities and limitation of herbivorous molluscs A functional group approach Marine Biology 68 3 299 319 doi 10 1007 BF00409596 S2CID 84207061 Jensen K R 1993 Morphological adaptations and plasticity of radular teeth of the Sacoglossa Ascoglossa Mollusca Opisthobranchia in relation to their food plants Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 48 2 135 155 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1993 tb00883 x Butterfield N J 2008 An early Cambrian radula Journal of Paleontology 82 3 543 554 doi 10 1666 07 066 1 S2CID 86083492 Firby J B Durham J W 1 November 1974 Molluscan Radula from Earliest Cambrian Journal of Paleontology 48 6 1109 1338 ISSN 0022 3360 Yochelson E L Kisselev G N 2003 Early Cambrian Salterella and Volborthella Phylum Agmata re evaluated Lethaia 36 1 8 20 doi 10 1080 00241160310001254 Gordon L M Joester D 2011 Nanoscale chemical tomography of buried organic inorganic interfaces in the chiton tooth Nature 469 7329 194 197 Bibcode 2011Natur 469 194G doi 10 1038 nature09686 PMID 21228873 S2CID 4430261 Gerlach J van Bruggen A C 1998 A first record of a terrestrial mollusc without a radula Journal of Molluscan Studies 64 2 249 250 doi 10 1093 mollus 64 2 249 Rudman W B 14 October 2002 http www seaslugforum net factsheet cfm base tethfimb Sea Slug Forum accessed 29 December 2010 Valdes A 2003 Preliminary Molecular Phylogeny of the Radula Less Dorids Gastropoda Opisthobranchia Based on 16S Mtdna Sequence Data Journal of Molluscan Studies 69 75 80 doi 10 1093 mollus 69 1 75 Oliverio M 1995 The systematics of the radula less gastropod Clathromangelia Caenogastropoda Conoidea Zoologica Scripta 24 3 193 201 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 1995 tb00399 x S2CID 85202876 Morphological Parallelism in Opisthobranch Gastropods Malacologia 313 327 1991 Brusca amp Brusca Invertebrates 2nd ed Wilbur Karl M Clarke M R Trueman E R eds 1985 The Mollusca vol 12 Paleontology and neontology of Cephalopods New York Academic Press ISBN 0 12 728702 7 Gabbott S E 1999 Orthoconic cephalopods and associated fauna from the late Ordovician Soom Shale Lagerstatte South Africa Palaeontology 42 123 148 doi 10 1111 1475 4983 00065 a b Cruz R Lins U Farina M 1998 Minerals of the radular apparatus of Falcidens sp Caudofoveata and the evolutionary implications for the Phylum Mollusca Biological Bulletin 194 2 224 230 doi 10 2307 1543051 JSTOR 1543051 PMID 28570844 Further reading EditMolluscan buccal structures and radula Barker G M 2001 The biology of terrestrial molluscs ISBN 978 0 85199 318 8 A Comparison of the feeding behaviour and the functional morphology of radula structure in Nudibranchs Hickman Carole S 1980 Gastropod Radulae and the Assessment of Form in Evolutionary Paleontology Paleobiology 6 3 276 294 doi 10 1017 s0094837300006801 S2CID 89455588 Caron J B Scheltema A Schander C Rudkin D 2006 A soft bodied mollusc with radula from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale PDF Nature 442 7099 159 163 Bibcode 2006Natur 442 159C doi 10 1038 nature04894 hdl 1912 1404 PMID 16838013 S2CID 4431853 Amelie H Scheltema Klaus Kerth Alan M Kuzirian April 2006 Original molluscan radula Comparisons among Aplacophora Polyplacophora Gastropoda and the Cambrian fossil Wiwaxia corrugata Journal of Morphology 257 2 219 245 doi 10 1002 jmor 10121 PMID 12833382 S2CID 32940079 Archived from the original on 16 December 2012 Katsuno S Sasaki T 2008 Comparative Histology of Radula Supporting Structures in Gastropoda Malacologia 50 1 2 13 56 doi 10 4002 0076 2997 50 1 13 S2CID 83872024 Lowenstam H A 27 July 1968 Goethite in Radular Teeth of Recent Marine Gastropods Science New Series 137 3526 279 280 doi 10 1126 science 137 3526 279 PMID 17744439 S2CID 40475929 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Radula Look up radula in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radula amp oldid 1113110354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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