Ctenidium (mollusc)
Mollusk anatomic feature From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A ctenidium is a respiratory organ or gill which is found in many molluscs. This structure exists in bivalves, cephalopods, polyplacophorans (chitons), and in aquatic gastropods such as freshwater snails and marine snails.[1] Certain molluscs, such as the bivalves,[2] possess paired ctenidia, but others, such as members of the Ampullariidae,[3] bear a single ctenidium.[4][5]

A ctenidium is shaped like a comb or a feather, with a central part from which many filaments or plate-like structures protrude, lined up in a row. Some aquatic gastropods possess a single row of filaments on their ctenidium, known as the monopectinate condition,[3] and others have a pair of filament rows, known as the bipectinate or aspidobranch condition.[6] The ctenidium hangs into the mantle cavity and increases the area available for gas exchange.[7] The word is Latinized but is derived from the Greek ktenidion which means "little comb", being a diminutive of the word kteis meaning comb.
- Pair of large, grey gills visible inside the mantle cavity of a giant squid
References
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