When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Land snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_snail

    The largest living species is the Giant African Snail or Ghana Tiger Snail (Achatina achatina; Family Achatinidae), which can measure up to 30 cm. [13] [14] The largest land snails of non-tropical Eurasia are endemic Caucasian snails Helix buchi and Helix goderdziana from the south-eastern Black Sea area in Georgia and Turkey; diameter of the ...

  3. Freshwater snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freshwater_snail

    Freshwater snails are gastropod mollusks that live in fresh water. There are many different families. There are many different families. They are found throughout the world in various habitats, ranging from ephemeral pools to the largest lakes, and from small seeps and springs to major rivers.

  4. Snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snail

    Snails can be found in a very wide range of environments, including ditches, deserts, and the abyssal depths of the sea. Although land snails may be more familiar to laymen, marine snails constitute the majority of snail species, and have much greater diversity and a greater biomass. Numerous kinds of snail can also be found in fresh water.

  5. Common periwinkle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_periwinkle

    Polydora ciliata has also been found to excavate burrows in the shell of the common periwinkle when the snail is mature (above 10 mm long). The reason why this happens only to mature snails is not yet known, but one hypothesis is that a mature snail will excrete a signal substance which attracts the P. ciliata larvae.

  6. New Zealand mud snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_mud_snail

    Mudsnails are impressively resilient. A snail can live for 24 hours without water. They can however survive for up to 50 days on a damp surface, [22] giving them ample time to be transferred from one body of water to another on fishing gear. The snails may even survive passing through the digestive systems of fish and birds. [23]

  7. Discus rotundatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discus_rotundatus

    Usually they lay 20-50 eggs in rotting wood or below decaying leaves. Eggs are white and flattened, measure about 1 mm and hatch after 10–30 days. These gastropods reach their maturity only in the second or third season and can live 2–3 years. [3] Unlike many terrestrial snails they do not have a sex dart. [4]

  8. Tarebia granifera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarebia_granifera

    There is also not known how long can snails remain buried. [ 1 ] Tarebia granifera will die at the temperature 7 °C in aquaria, [ 6 ] but they do not live in water temperature under 10 °C in the wild.

  9. Orthalicus reses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthalicus_reses

    Upon hatching, the juvenile snails immediately proceed to climb adjacent trees. Most nesting snails appear to be approximately 2 to 3 years old and are estimated to live for up to 6 years, with 2.11 years being the mean age for the Stock Island population at the time of Deisler's study (1987). [11]