Gastropod shell

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Image:Zonitoides nitidus drawing.svg
The shell of Zonitoides nitidus, a land snail, has dextral coiling.
Upper image: Dorsal view, showing whorls and apex
Central image: Lateral view showing the profile of the shell
Lower image: Basal view showing umbilicus in the centre

The gastropod shell is an animal shell which is part of the body of a gastropod or snail. It is an external skeleton or exoskeleton, which serves not only for muscle attachment, but also for protection from predators and from mechanical damage. In land snails the shell is an essential protection against the sun, and against drying out.

The gastropod shell has several layers, and is typically made of calcium carbonate precipitated out into an organic matrix. It is secreted by a part of the molluscan body known as the mantle.

Image:Czescimuszli shells.jpg
A large land snail shell with part broken off to show the interior.
1 - umbilicus
2 - parietal callus
3 - aperture
4 - columella
5 - suture
6 - whorl
7 - apex

Not all gastropods have a shell, but the majority do. The shell is in one piece, and is typically spirally coiled, although some groups, such as the various different families and genera of limpets, have simple cone-shaped shells as adults.

Contents

[edit] Chirality in gastropods

Because coiled shells are asymmetrical, they possess a quality called chirality, the "handedness" of an asymmetrical structure.

By far the majority of gastropod shells are dextral (right-handed) in their coiling, but a small minority of species and genera are virtually always sinistral (left-handed), and a very few species show an even mixture of dextral and sinistral individuals.

In species that are almost always dextral, very rarely a sinistral specimen will be produced, and these oddities are avidly sought after by some shell collectors.

If you hold a coiled gastropod shell with the aperture down and the spire pointing upwards, a dextral shell will have the aperture on the right hand side, and a sinistral shell will have the aperture on the left hand side.

This chirality of gastropods is often overlooked when photographs of coiled gastropods are "flipped" by a non-expert prior to being used in a publication. This image "flipping" results in a normal dextral gastropod appearing to be a rare and abnormal sinistral one.

[edit] Parts of the gastropod shell

  • periostracum: a thin layer of organic "skin" which forms the outer layer of the shell of many species
  • protoconch: the larval shell, often remains in position even on an adult shell
  • apex: the smallest few whorls of the shell
  • spire: the part of the shell that protrudes above the body whorl
  • whorl: each one of the complete rotations of the shell spiral
  • body whorl: the largest whorl in which the main part of the viseral mass of the mollusk is found
  • aperture: the opening of the shell
  • peristome: the part of the shell that is right around the aperture
  • columella: the "little column" at the axis of revolution of the shell
  • umbilicus: in shells where the whorls move apart as they grow, on the underside of the shell there is a deep depression reaching up towards the spire; this is the umbilicus
  • lira: one kind of shell sculpture
  • plait: another kind of shell sculpture
  • varix: on some mollusk shells, spaced raised and thickened vertical ribs mark the end of a period of rapid growth; these are varices
  • operculum: the "trapdoor" of the shell
  • Siphonal canal: an extension of the aperture in certain gastropods
  • Parietal callus: a ridge on the inner lip of the aperture in certain gastropods
  • Suture: The junction between whorls of most gastropods

[edit] A selection of different kinds of gastropod shells

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

de:Schneckenhaus nl:Schelpterminologie (mollusken) nn:Sniglehus ru:Раковина (моллюски)

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