Today's snail: Gittenbergeria turriplana
(source)

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from North Macedonia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Martinique

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Martinique

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
Today's snail: Gittenbergeria turriplana
(source)
🐌
Kaputar slug (Triboniophorus sp. nov. 'Kaputar')
Photo by n.weigner
Macgillivray's Treesnail. Sadly, I can’t find much information on this species, but you can see a juvenile here
Rhynchotrochus macgillivrayi
18/05/22
8/19/21
Fluorescent pink slug, unique to Australian mountaintop, survives bushfires | The Guardian
A fluorescent pink slug, found only on a single mountaintop in northern New South Wales, has survived the bushfires that burnt through much of its alpine habitat.
Around 60 of the brightly coloured Mount Kaputar slugs, which can grow to a size longer than a human hand, were spotted by National Parks and Wildlife Service rangers after recent rainfall in Mount Kaputar national park.
The Kaputar fire burnt through the area for more than six weeks from October to December 2019, affecting more than 18,000 hectares of land.
The mountain was formed by a now-extinct volcano, and is home to at least 20 species of snails and slugs found nowhere else in the world. The area has been identified as an endangered ecological community, the first of its kind in Australia.
Some of the fluorescent slugs would have managed to survive the fire because they had “retreated into rock crevices” in the heat, the Australian Museum malacologist Frank Köhler said.
But around 90% of the slug population, which also hibernates in bark and trees, would have been killed in the fire, he said.
Much of the slug’s food sources – fungi, moss and mould – would also have been burnt by the fire, but Köhler said these species should recover relatively quickly.
In coming months the slug might be at risk of being seen more easily in the burnt landscape by hungry birds and mammals, said Köhler, but the bright colour could also act as a warning to dissuade the predators.
Tiny snail unearthed in China could be the world's smallest, researchers report.
A teeny, tiny shell that turned up in a soil sample from China may belong to one of the world's smallest land snails, researchers report September 28 in ZooKeys.
Scientists surveying China's Guangxi region for small mollusks found seven new species of "microsnails," which have shells smaller than 5 millimeters. Among these, several small gray shells measured below a millimeter in height, but one shell stood out — at a mere 0.86 millimeters tall.
At that size, it could very well be home to the smallest known snail in the world. Though the scientists did not find any live specimens (a common problem when hunting for small mollusks), they hypothesize that the shell belongs to a novel species, dubbed Angustopila dominkae.
Today's snail: Cochlorina aurisleporis
(source)