Showing posts with label snail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snail. Show all posts

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Land Snail Identification

Land Snail on Milkweed (family Succineidae)-3.jpg
family Succineidae

There is a gentleman in British Columbia who helped me partially identify my land snails (see my Flickr Land Snail Set here). His mollus.ca site is about Canadian snails. Since Canada is 20 miles away and I have never been able to find any help in the US, I e-mailed him about my snails (what’s in Canada probably is here, also, right?). Apparently, all of my snails are from the same family, Succineidae. This family of snails is also called amber snails. There is a delightful page of information about amber snails at http://www.molluscs.at/gastropoda/ter. . .

Of all native terrestrial snails, amber snails have the closest connection to water, but still they never actually live in the water, though they may live on plants growing there.

Amber snails have got a thin walled translucent shell often amber coloured, whose spire usually is very small compared to the huge apertural whorl. An amber snail's aperture rim is sharp and there is no apertural lip. In this regard, amber snails are similar to pond snails (Lymnaeidae). Between different populations there may often be extreme, even hereditary, differences in size, which sometimes makes the determination of species very difficult.

Similar to glass snails (Vitrinidae), in some exotic genera of the amber snail family there is a vitrinisation of different degrees: In those groups there are semi-slugs as well as complete slugs.

Like other pulmonate terrestrial snails, amber snails also are hermaphrodites. They become sexually mature when they have reached half their final shell size. But amber snails have got two separate sexual openings, the female one lying above the male one. Though the sperm cells mature before the egg cells, apart from mutual fertilisation, there may also be auto-fertilisation, which only serves population increase.

The native species of Succinea and Oxyloma afterwards lay about 150 eggs, from which juvenile snails hatch 1 to 2 weeks later. Amber snails may reach an age of up to 2 years, the common amber snail, Succinea putris, may even grow as old as 3.

Once again, I am foiled in my search for a rare species! But land snails are fascinating to photograph.

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Saturday, July 9, 2011

Another Land Snail

Land snail-5.jpg

If anyone knows a place that can help me identify land snails (with photos), please let me know. I have searched for days. We have a golden snail and this black snail that run about after many rainy days. The black snail is found in the woods, the golden one is everywhere.

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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Unidentified

Unidentified 6 petal wildflower-1.jpg
Yellow, six petal wildflower on single stem, about two feet tall.

I've spent too much time trying to identify this flower and these snails. I am baffled as to why I can't identify the wildflower because we have many excellent guides. But the snail . . . . the Internet is the worst place for identifying them. When are the terrestrial gastropod specialists going to write a comprehensive, regional, understandable guide to identifying them? Can you help out? Please leave a comment if you know the genus and species of these. Thank you.

Terrestrial Gastropod (land snail)-1.jpg
above and below: land snail.

Terrestrial Gastropod (land snail)-4.jpg

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Monday, November 29, 2010

A Land Snail

Unidentified land snail  7
Unidentified

Good luck to you if you ever want to identify the genus and species of a snail or slug. There just is not enough information on the Internet. The research biologists write a lot but never seem to take photographs. I can't figure that one out. I'm ready to e-mail UVM biologists for an ID on this pretty snail, but I'm too lazy to bother. But I did learn that snails lay their eggs in a hole in the ground and cover them up with snail feces. When the eggs hatch, the little baby snails are so hungry that they eat their shells and, often, their siblings!

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