Today's snail: Thylacodes squamigerus | Scaled Worm Snail
(source)
seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United States

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Today's snail: Thylacodes squamigerus | Scaled Worm Snail
(source)
I want to tell you all about Worm Snails
Last summer (2024) I had the privilege and pleasure of attending a 6 week class at Bamfield Marine Sciences Center (BMSC) and I learned about many awesome marine organisms. So I'm thinking I want to tell people about them, because they're not big or flashy or anything like that, but they are still cool! Little uncharasmatic beasties living their best lives. So I'm going to start a small series and teach you all about the critters I met.
I want to start with worm snails (Vermetidae). Not snail worms, that something else, but worm snails: little snails that resemble tube worms but are clearly molluscs. Also, I think they're really cute. Like, look at that face:
Look at it! It's just a little guy!
This is very long, here's a readmore so in don't 'color of the sky' your dash with this:
#2767 - Petaloconchus sp.
Snails with worm-like shells, usually found growing cemented onto a hard surface, or cemented together in colonies. The inner surface is smooth, unlike the tubes of the better-known Tube Worms. Since the shape of the tubes is highly variable, Vermetid taxonomy is a nightmare, even with the living species.
According to one source I've looked up, there are 135 recognized living species of Vermetidae and 16 genera. The Paleobiology Database recognizes 11 fossil genera and 114 fossil species of Vermetidae. They've been around since the Triassic (250-201Mya) - the fossil up the top is from the Late Oligocene, in the Waitakian Stage (25.2-21.7Mya).
Since Vermetids can't move from where they grow attached to the seafloor, they feed by capturing plankton - either filtered from the water passing over the gills, or by spinning a mucus net in which plankton is trapped.
Unusually for a sessile animal, vermetids are of separate sexes, with sperm packets captured in the feeding web of females and eventually fertilizing her eggs. Fertilized eggs are brooded in her mantle cavity, and released as crawling or free-swimming larvae.
University of Otago Geology Museum, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand
Scientific name: Vermiculus lumbricalis var. cornea Morch, 1861
(via Natural History Museum - Collection specimens - Data Portal)
RESEARCHERS UNCOVER A TINY REEF BUILDING GASTROP IN THE MEDITERRANEAN
Scientists discovered several years ago by a genetic study that worm snails or worm shells Dendropoma petraeum, distributed throughout the Mediterranean area, and considered a threatened species, were actually four cryptic species (morphologically similar but genetically different) distributed in different sub-basins in this sea.
- The new species D. Lebeche. Scale bars: 2mm
Dendropoma lebeche is the new species described by spanish researchers in the journal Mediterranean Marine Science. This mollusk filtered seawater and form very resistant bioconstructions that provide habitat for other sea organisms, protect the coastline and now helps researchers in determine variations in the sea level that occurred in the last eight millennia.
This gastropod attaches itself to the substrate through its irregular shell. It is a gregarious species that forms large colonies of individuals stuck together and compacted by calcareous algae, creating structures with various shapes, such as ridges, flanges, hubs and even microarrecifes bordering the coastal rocky platforms.
Bioconstrucciones formed by the new species Dendropoma lebeche in Cabo de Palos, Murcia by José Templado.
Reference: Templado et al. 2016 Reef building Mediterranean vermetid gastropods: disentangling the Dendropoma petraeum species complex". Mediterranean Marine Science.
Serpulorbis sipho (Fam. Vermetidae), a common Worm Snail on rocky shores around Perth
Ahhh! Sometimes I just have to lie back and bask in nature's boundless capacity to be completely stationary! We've already seen ONE way in which molluscs take on the worm's lifestyle. Aplacophorans were molluscs who dropped their shell, became longer and thinner, and took to burrowing underground or wrapping themselves around corals. Worm Snails are different. It turns out you don't actually have to get rid of your shell to live like a worm!