TIL: Cool Snail Facts

in #steemstem7 years ago (edited)

Hello! Hello! Do you remember our little snail friend I showed you on Tuesday? Well, today it's here to teach us a few interesting facts about snails. Are you ready?

Join him!

Shelled gastropods

Snails are gastropod molluscs covered by a calcium carbonate shell. They are divided into three categories:

  1. Terrestrial snails 
  2. Sea snails
  3. Freshwater snails

Here we will be talking about land snails.

The largest ones on Earth might grow up to 18 cm long

The African giant snail is the biggest snail species in the world and lives in West Africa. (@greenrun, @samminator, @pearlumie, have you ever seen one? Wikipedia says they can be found in Nigeria.)

The smallest ones won't get any taller than a 1 mm

The smallest snail species on Earth are Angustopila dominikae, they are found in southern China and their height reaches 0.86 mm.  [9]

They have teeth along their tongue

Snails have a ribbon-like structure inside their mouth called "radula". This is equipped with lots of tiny teeth that are used to scrap off food, similarly to a file. [1, 2]

Hermaphrodites

Snails are equipped with both reproductive organs, male and female (although a few land species present separate sexes). [1, 2]

Snails love foreplay - Love darts

An interesting part of their mating ritual is the tossing of love darts (that's right, you thought it was Cupid who used his arrows to pierce the lovers' hearts? No, snails did it first)

Love darts are sharp, pointed darts made of calcium carbonate or chitin and are used while looking for a partner, before the actual mating. They are secreted by a specific organ of the reproductive system and their size ranges usually at around 5 mm (although they can be from 1-30 mm long). These formations are not shot into the air, waiting to hit a specific organ of the recipient snail, but they are tossed when the two snails are near each other (it's a contact shot).

The mating ritual may last from 2 - 12 whole hours (wow! some women complain about very little foreplay, but this is way too long). During this time, the two partners make circles around each other, they touch tentacles, bite their lips and the area around the genital pore. The penis then starts to slightly appear. The dart is ready to be fired when mating time is almost there. The two partners move in order to get in the perfect position to shoot their darts into each other's body, which happens once one snail's body touches the other's genital pore.

As soon as the "exchange" is done, it's time for the "main course" (intercourse in other words). The partners exchange sperm, the fertilized eggs will be delivered and buried in the soil and then the parents will wait for those little "Mini Me's" to hatch from their eggs some 2-4 weeks later. Up to 100 eggs may be delivered at a single brood. [2, 3, 4, 6]

And here is a video I found on youtube that describes the whole ritual very well:

I don't need your sperm

Hermaphrodism comes with a bunch of advantages and one of these is being able to self-reproduce. Several species of snails will self-fertilize instead of mating (well, in Greece we say: "Αν πετύχει η μαλακία, τύφλα να 'χει το γα#ήσι" - "When masturbation is successful, who needs sex after all" @trumpman, did I get this right?) [2, 6]

Babies eat their unborn siblings

Hatchlings are small, delicate and fragile. Their soft shells are not able to protect them against predators and other dangers. This means that the newborn babies will need calcium supplies to build their shell stronger. In order to achieve this, they will eat the egg they hatched from, but in some cases they will even eat their unhatched siblings. [2, 6]

Hairy shells

Some snails bear tiny hair all over their shell. There is a hypothesis which claims that this hair is meant to help in locomotion, especially in wet environments. [3, 7]

They hibernate

Some snails hibernate during the winter. In order to protect themselves, they secrete a mucus to cover their shell opening and seal it off. [2]

There is snail caviar

Yes, you got it right! Some people consider snail eggs a delicacy. Snail eggs are collected, processed, sometimes even pasteurized in order to be preserved longer and then sent out in the market. Snail farming is even a thing in case you didn't know. It even has a fancy name: Heliciculture [1, 2, 8]


References

[1] en.wikipedia.org_Snail
[2] wikipedia.org_Land_snail
[3] mentalfloss.com
[4] wikipedia.org_Love_dart
[5] wikipedia.org_Gastropoda
[6] snail-world.com
[7] bmcevolbiol.biomedcentral.com
[8] wikipedia.org_Snail_caviar
[9] livescience.com

*All images (with Nikon D3400, 18-55 mm) by @ruth-girl - Steemit, 2018

Thank you so much for your time!

Until my next post,
Steem on and keep smiling, people!

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Just when i thought i had seen it all. You mean these guys could spend up to 12 flipping hours rolling around? lol. Whatever happened to the term get straight to the point. lol..

Fascinating one!

I know!! Isn't 12 hours too long? I'd be hungry and sleepy after having spent half the day flirting...

Thanks for reading @pangoli! :)

I enjoyed your post :) I usually throw a box of salt at them, but maybe I'll relocate them next time :)

Thanks a lot! :D

Oh, yes please! They might be disgusting and slimy, but they still deserve a place in our gardens (unless of course they end up destroying all your plants, then you need to remove them).

Perimenw me anupomonisia tin 3h katigoria !!!

Hehe! Ok! ;)

lovely write @ruth-girl
thank you foir sharing
resteemid

Much appreciated!! Thank you! :D

welcome @ruth-girl

Those are some spectacular shots @ruth-girl!

Love darts are sharp, pointed darts made of calcium carbonate or chitin and are used while looking for a partner, before the actual mating.

So I guess snails can kill for love lol.

The mating ritual may last from 2 - 12 whole hours

Give me a break! What kind of nympho-snails are those?

well, in Greece we say: "When masturbation is successful, who needs sex after all"

Well, I guess that's why 'malakas' is a greek word. :P

I apologize if I ruined your post! :P
Keep up the great work!

Ahahaha! I loved your observations! :D
"Kill for love" This is actually not impossible, as the spears might pierce the "recipient" snail (κατάλαβες; να πας για μαλλί και να βγεις κουρεμένος... βασικά σουβλισμένος ως έτερος Αθανάσιος Διάκος)

Basically I wanted to write the whole saying in Greek, but... oh, what the heck! I'm gonna edit it right now! :P

Thank you for being here!

I have seen big snails here in Nigeria but not up to 18cm long.
Interesting facts. I remember helping a friend with her undergraduate project on snails haemolymph (blue -blood ) and the epiphragm they produce during aestivation/hibernation
which can used in human cosmetics

This sounds like a very interesting project. I believe you learned a lot :)

Dear @ruth-girl, congrats (from an ex-biologist who switched to IT 18 years ago) for a very pleasant-to-read post.

I'd like to contribute two small things for the readers:

  1. for non-greek speaking people it might be fun to note that "gasteropod" means "stomach in the foot"
  2. one cannot skip over the fact that in France, snails are considered a delicacy, cooked and served with garlic and butter

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Concretely speaking I have friends who remained in the domain of molecular biology research and whom I 'm working to persuade to try out Steemit as STEM blogging platform (didn't lose hope yet but I can't boast about much either)

Our detailed witness application is here.

Would you maybe consider approving it as well?

Thank you for the valuable input!

It is hard to get people sign up, most of them do not believe in the potential this platform has and it is a shame.

I will go over your links soon. Thanks for letting me know and good luck with your witness! :)

Thank you!

Indeed, people interested in tech and who'd be willing to sign do not blog much and people who blog are too far away from tech topics to give anything but a blank stare when told about "blogging on blockchain" :-)

Re: witness - We've just published an update after 7 days (TL;DR: still no block for us :( ... )

Small bragging: do you happen to know @roxane ? You might want to check out this article from her :-)

I guess this has explained my curiosity last time i asked you about how these snails reproduce.
I have in two occasions eaten snails, the meat is actually delicious. But the problem is that they quite expensive and difficult to see easily, especially the big ones.
I agree with @rhaphelle, hehe, they are more delicious when fried.

Ruthie has a schedule and doesn't do spoilers, hehe! I'm glad you got your answers @cyprianj! :)
I can see that snails are a popular delicacy in Nigeria. In Greece I think they are very popular in Crete (island).

Didn't think that snails can be self-reproductive too! Also that siblings eating fact. I didn't think about snails this deep, hahaha.
A greatly informative article u wrote, ruth. And really amazing shots too!
Cheers!

Well, let's be honest: I didn't think that deep about them either. I just got curious after finding so many in the garden :P

Thanks @ied! :D

Okay, all i know knew about snails is they are very delicious when fried and taken with garri!

And yes, we have big ones here in Nigeria.

Hehe! What's wrong with you, people? How can you chew on that bugger? They are cute, but I can't picture myself eating them...

Do you have any pictures of the big ones, please?

Lol. Nothing is wrong with us.
Are you a veggie?

Unfortunately, don't have any pictures.

I'm not a veggie, I loooove meat! I just can't picture myself eating snails :P

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