Question
Question: Apple snail is the common name of (a) Turbinella (b) Pila (c) Cyprea (d) Aplysia...
Apple snail is the common name of
(a) Turbinella
(b) Pila
(c) Cyprea
(d) Aplysia
Solution
It is a family of large freshwater snails that contains both gills and lungs with the mental cavity.
Complete answer:
Pila is the common name of Apple snail and it is a family of large freshwater snails and aquatic gastropod molluscs with a gill and an operculum in their body. This is in the superfamily Ampullariidae, class Gastropoda, and phylum Mollusca. The Ampullariidae has some unusual characteristics because they have both a gill and a lung, with the mantle cavity being divided in order to separate the two types of respiratory structures. This adaptation allows these snails to be amphibious. Pila species act as a host of a trematode.
Features of Apple snail:
- All molluscs are terrestrial or aquatic with an organ- system level of organization.
- They are bilaterally symmetrical, triploblastic and coelomate animals.
- The body of Pila is covered by a calcareous shell and is unsegmented with a distinct head, muscular foot and visceral hump.
- They are soft-bodied animals with a spirally coiled round shell.
- They have respiratory and excretory functions.
- The anterior head has sensory tentacles and the operculum is well developed.
- The mouth of molluscs contains a file like a rasping organ for feeding, called a radula.
- Mainly all molluscs are dioecious in nature and oviparous with indirect development.
Figure: Apple snail
So, the correct answer is Pila.
Note:
- Triploblastic means three embryonic layers such as ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm present. - Coelomate animals have a true body cavity called a coelom.
- Trematodes are parasitic flatworms, known as flukes which are from phylum Platyhelminthes. Most trematodes have a complex life cycle with two hosts; molluscs and parasites. The secondary host is the molluscs.