Substrate Attributes Determine Gait in a Terrestrial Gastropod
Autor: | Bruno Pernet, Janice Voltzow, Amberle McKee |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | The Biological Bulletin. 224:53-61 |
ISSN: | 1939-8697 0006-3185 |
DOI: | 10.1086/bblv224n1p53 |
Popis: | Some terrestrial gastropods are able to move using two gaits: adhesive crawling, where the entire foot is separated from the substrate only by a thin layer of mucus and the snail leaves a continuous mucus trail; and loping, where regions of the foot arch above the substrate and the snail leaves a discontinuous mucus trail. Loping has been interpreted as a means of rapidly escaping predators. We found that the pulmonate Cornu aspersum moved using adhesive crawling on dry acrylic or glass substrates, but loped on dry concrete or wood. Loping snails did not move more rapidly than snails using adhesive crawling. Snails moving on concrete secreted a greater volume of pedal mucus per area of trail than those moving on acrylic; locomotion on concrete thus requires greater expenditure of mucus than does locomotion on acrylic. Because loping snails deposit a smaller area of mucus per distance traveled than do snails using adhesive crawling, loping may conserve mucus when moving on porous, absorbent substrates. Members of several other terrestrial pulmonate taxa can also lope on concrete, suggesting that this plasticity in gait is widespread among terrestrial snails. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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