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Radula is the scientific name for the toothed chitinous ribbon in the mouth of gastropods. They use it to graze and scrape off diatoms and other microscopic algae off rock surfaces and other substrata.
The radula is common to all mollusks, except the bivalves, who feed by siphoning and filtering small particles from water.
The mouth of the gastropods is located below the anterior part of the mollusk. It opens into a pocket-like buccal cavity, containing the radula sac.
The radula apparatus consists of two parts :
The odontophore is movable and protrusible and the radula itself is movable over the odontophore. Through this action the radula 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 oesophagus to the digestive tract.
These actions continually wear down the frontal teeth. New teeth are continuously formed at the posterior end of the buccal cavity in the radula 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 number of teeth present depends on the species of mollusk 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 largest number of teeth per row is found in Pleurotomaria (gastropod) with over 200 teeth per row (Hyman, 1967). The shape and arrangement of teeth is an adaptation to the feeding regime 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 oesophagus.
Certain gastropods use their radula teeth to hunt other gastropods and bivalve mollusks, scraping away the soft parts for ingestion. Cone shells have a single radula tooth, that can be thrust like a harpoon into its prey, releasing a neurotoxin.
The number, shape, and specialized arrangement of 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 radula teeth consists of
This arrangement of the teeth is expressed in a teeth formula, with the following abbreviations :
This can be expressed in a typical formula such as:
3 + D + 2 + R + 2 + D + 3
meaning : on each side 3 marginal teeth, 1 dominant lateral tooth, 2 lateral teeth and one central tooth.
This results in 7 basic types :