Operculum (animal)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
A live individual of the sea snail Rapana venosa retracted into the shell, with the operculum closing the aperture
Firing sequence of the cnida in a hydra's nematocyst[1]
  Operculum (lid)
  "Finger" that turns inside out
/ / / Barbs
  Venom
  Victim's skin
  Victim's tissues

An operculum is an anatomical feature, a stiff structure resembling a lid or a small door that opens and closes, and thus controls contact between the outside world and an internal part of an animal. Examples include:

See also

  • Aptychus: A structure in ammonites which usually consists of two plates, and which was long thought to be a form of double operculum, but which more recently has been proposed to have been a jaw mechanism.

References