Baba Berries Baba Franchuk's Rocambole Garlic Babáco Melons Baby Back Ribs Baby Basmati Baby Bear Pumpkins Baby Beef Liver Baby Blue Hubbard Squash Baby Bok Choy Baby Boo Pumpkins Baby Carrots Baby Corn Baby Cut Carrots Baby Green Hubbard Squash Baby Indian Pumpkin Baby Lima Beans Baby Pam Pumpkins Baby Potatoes Baby Red Hubbard Squash Baby Shells Babycham Bacanora Bacardi Rum Baccicia Beans Bachelor Apples Back Bacon Back Half Back of Rump Roast Back Ribs Back Ribs Backfin Crabmeat Backs -- Chicken Bacon Bacon -- Ayrshire Middle Bacon -- Back Previous | Next | Mollusks© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced MolluscsMollusks mostly live in the water, but not always: land-based snails and slugs are Mollusks, too. Mollusks are invertebrates, meaning they have no backbones. Their soft bodies are "single segments" -- all one piece. If you wonder whether this is true of an octopus, because surely that has "legs" that are a distinct part of their body, they are actually all one part of the same body, sort of like gloop dripping through your fingers -- there are no joints. Most Mollusks secrete calcium carbonate to make shells that will outlive them for quite a while. There are three types of Mollusks: bivalves, cephalopods and gastropods.
Also called: Phylum Mollusca (Scientific Name); Mollusques (French); Weichtiere (German); Molluschi (Italian); Moluscos (Spanish)
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Molluscs