Meet the Fire Snail, the Vampire equivalent of a Slug.
Fire snail, dressed in a killer outfit of pitch black over bloody red. Exists only on single location on the globe, 60 miles radius. Is it s
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Indonesia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Portugal
seen from United States
Meet the Fire Snail, the Vampire equivalent of a Slug.
Fire snail, dressed in a killer outfit of pitch black over bloody red. Exists only on single location on the globe, 60 miles radius. Is it s
Nightmare nightmare nightmare
✨💉Roza💉✨
✨Made another hazbin oc✨
Meet Roza, she's a vampire snail demon.
Roza works as a tattoo artist and will do them for a price of money or Blood
Has toxic inky saliva and sharp fangs
She died from ink poisoning
Roza @artisticdreamer
I love my boss...we both work from home and she just randomly texted me about these vampire and volcano snails.... yes they’re real!
Vampire Snail
Image accessed at Parasite of the Day here
[I have a few more vermin to get through, this time in a marine invertebrates vein. I was able to find plenty of photos of dead Colubraria shells, but not a lot of them as living snails. The hazards of being inspired by relatively obscure taxa.]
Vampire Snail CR 6 N Vermin This coiled shell is about the size of a wolf, containing a snail with a long, thin proboscis tipped with scalpel-like blades.
Vampire snails are large blood-drinking gastropods. They are ambush predators, and greatly prefer to attack sleeping targets than get into battles. Their long proboscises can extend three times the length of their bodies, and a vampire snail will usually attack a creature on the surface while buried in a sandy bottom. They typically only drink blood for a few rounds, and rarely leave fatal wounds, but their venom is a potent soporific, and creatures so affected may be unconscious for hours—more than enough time for them to fall prey to other dangers.
Vampire Snails as Vermin Companions Starting Statistics: Size Small; Speed 20 ft. burrow 20 ft.; AC +5 natural armor; Attack bite (1d4 plus grab); Ability Scores Str 11, Dex 11, Con 14, Int —, Wis 16, Cha 7; Special Attacks blood drain (1d2 Con), grab (Medium); Special Qualities bottom walker, tremorsense 30 ft., water dependency, withdraw
7th-Level Advancement: Size Medium; AC +4 natural armor; Attack bite (1d6 plus poison and grab); Ability Scores Str +8, Dex –2, Con +4; Special Attacks blood drain (1d3 Con), grab (Large), poison (unconciousness, Con-based DC); Special Qualities Blind-fight as bonus feat, reduced water dependency
Your vacation Fotos Look amazing! Swimming in Winter seems so nice, its Not Like that at all in Germany 😱
But what peakes my interest is the Victorian photoshoot?! Vampire-snail?! 👀
Believe me, I am a little crazy when it comes to water. I have swam at the snow, swam in the dead of winter, swim swim swimming. No matter if it's the beach, creek, pool, pond, puddle - I'm in it.
I was living my best "Madam Red" life at the Victorian photo shoot. I would like to keep up my anonymity online without a full reveal, so I've blurred my face below the cut if you'd like to see one of the photos partially.
Holy shit. There’s a vampire snail
Colubraria reticulata is a snail that basically functions like an aquatic vampire bat. It sneaks up on sleeping fish and drinks their blood non-lethally, using an elongated proboscis. How have I never heard of this before?
@terrible-tentacle-theatre