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Tag Archives: British molluscs

Dog whelk

19 Saturday Apr 2025

Posted by sconzani in molluscs, seaside

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Tags

British molluscs, Dog whelk, gastropod mollusc, marine fauna, Nucella lapillus, shellfish

Following Thursday’s post about Common periwinkles, it occurred to me that I should probably have explained more clearly where I found them … or, even better, show you. So, the photo below, taken a few years ago, shows Penarth Pier. As the Severn Estuary has the second greatest tidal range in the world, at high tide the water usually covers the stony beach (and almost comes up to the pier’s walkway at the very highest tides) and at low tide you can walk out on the sand and rocks under the end of the pier, sometimes further. The periwinkles were found under the pier, living on the support structures, as was today’s subject.

The Dog whelk (Nucella lapillus) is common around Britain’s coastline, found in particular where its food, mussels and barnacles, live. The Marine Life Information Network’s website goes in to gory detail about this gastropod’s feeding methods, how it uses its proboscis to push or bore a hole in its prey’s shell, how it drugs its prey then injects it with digestive enzymes to turn its victim in to a mush that can be sucked out. I never knew the Dog whelk was like the Hannibal Lecter of the marine world.

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Common periwinkles

17 Thursday Apr 2025

Posted by sconzani in coastal fauna, molluscs

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British molluscs, Common periwinkle, Littorina littorea, periwinkles, shellfish

One benefit of this moving malarkey, which is limiting my time to get out for long walks, is that my shorter walks have taken me down to the local beach a few times and reminded me how much I enjoy fossicking along the tide line and how little I know about the flora and fauna of the seashore.

This week’s finds included these shellfish which, I think, are Common periwinkles (Littorina littorea). They are found all around the rocky coasts of Britain, though, locally, these periwinkles are growing on the concrete and steel supports of the pier.

The Marine Life Information Network website says these are

the largest British periwinkle, with the shell reaching a maximum height of 52 mm. The shell is sharply conical with a pointed apex and surface sculpturing. The spiral ridges which are marked in young animals tend to become obscured in older individuals, giving the shell a smooth appearance.

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Slug: Ambigolimax

05 Saturday Apr 2025

Posted by sconzani in molluscs

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Tags

Ambigolimax, British molluscs, British slugs, slug

For some reason the national recorder for slugs thought I’d used a photo app to identify this slug, which I’ve never done. Maybe he just assumed everyone uses them these days, and, in this case, he was ‘afraid the photograph app which you have used has led you astray’. The truth is that I’d googled, and searched various online websites, and couldn’t work out what this slug was so had just recorded it as one of the Arion species. I even managed to get that wrong – turns out this is one of the Three-band slugs (though, I have to admit, I can only see two bands) and ‘At present we cannot tell which of the two species it is without dissection so it has to be recorded just as Ambigolimax‘. I’ll know for the future.

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Disco for slugs

01 Friday Nov 2024

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, molluscs

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Tags

British fungi, British molluscs, British slugs, fungi, Lemon disco, slug

Who knew slugs liked disco? Lemon disco, that is. The fungus, not the John Travolta – Saturday Night Fever – Bee Gees – strobing lights type of disco. This particular slug certainly did, as it had paused its slithering to taste the delicate little yellow cups.

241101 slug and lemon disco

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333/366 Striped snail

28 Saturday Nov 2020

Posted by sconzani in molluscs

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Tags

Banded snail, British molluscs, British snails, Cernuella virgata, snails, Striped snail

And now for something completely different….

201128 striped snail (1)

I don’t often look at molluscs but these banded beauties caught my eye when I was walking across the Cardiff Bay Barrage earlier this week. I’m fairly sure they’re Cernuella virgata, Striped or Banded snails.

201128 striped snail (3)
201128 striped snail (4)

The presence of dark-on-light spiralling bands on their shells is one defining feature, as is their semi-spherical, rather than flat, shape, and the small open umbilicus. And they’re usually found on coastal sites, particularly in calcareous grassland, which fits the Barrage location.

201128 striped snail (2)

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291/365 Good weather for slugs

18 Friday Oct 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, molluscs, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Arion ater agg, Black slug, British molluscs, British slugs, slug

191018 Black slug (1)

I know Wales has a reputation for being a wet country but the past couple of weeks have been much wetter than any I’ve known in my four years here. Still, it’s good weather for slugs, which is why this large and colourful beastie was to be found sliding its way across my path today. It was about 3 inches long and I presume, despite its colour – they vary a lot, that it’s a Black slug (Arion ater agg.), a species that can only be positively identified by examination of its genitals. I’m not going there!

191018 Black slug (2)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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