Caballo Peppers Cabaret Potatoes Cabbage Cabbage -- Cavolo Nero Cabbage -- Chinese Cabbage -- Chinese White Cabbage -- Coleslaw Cabbage -- Quintal Cabbage -- Red Cabbage -- Sauerkraut Cabbage -- Savoy Cabbage -- White Cabbage Turnip Cabbie Claw Cabelew Cabitutu Caboc Cheese Cabrales Blue Cheese Cacciucco Cachaça Caciocavallo Cheese Cactus Leaves Cactus Pads Cactus Pears Cadbury -- John Caerffili Cheese Caerphilly Castle Cheese Caerphilly Cheese Caesar's Mushroom Caesar Potatoes Caesar Salad Cailletier Olives Caimito Caja China Caja Peas 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