enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Excretory system of gastropods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excretory_system_of_gastropods

    The excretory system of gastropods removes nitrogenous waste and maintains the internal water balance of these creatures, commonly referred to as snails and slugs. The primary organ of excretion is a nephridium. Drawing of excretory system of Lymnaea meridensis; renal tube and ureter in renal region extending between pericardium and mantle collar

  3. Respiratory system of gastropods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_system_of...

    Unipectinate gills are found in a wide range of snails, including marine, freshwater, and even terrestrial forms. Examples include periwinkles, conches, and whelks. The water current is oblique, as it is in the turban shells, but many have developed a siphon formed from the rolled-up margin of the mantle. The siphon sucks in water to the mantle ...

  4. Freshwater snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freshwater_snail

    Freshwater snails are indirectly among the deadliest animals to humans, as they carry parasitic worms that cause schistosomiasis, a disease estimated to kill between 10,000 and 200,000 people annually. [1] [2]

  5. Snail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snail

    The radula works like a file, ripping food into small pieces. Many snails are herbivorous, eating plants or rasping algae from surfaces with their radulae, though a few land species and many marine species are omnivores or predatory carnivores. Snails cannot absorb colored pigments when eating paper or cardboard so their feces are also colored. [3]

  6. Gastropoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastropoda

    This class comprises snails and slugs from saltwater, freshwater, and from the land. There are many thousands of species of sea snails and slugs, as well as freshwater snails, freshwater limpets, land snails and slugs. The class Gastropoda is a diverse and highly successful class of mollusks within the phylum Mollusca.

  7. Anaerobic organism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaerobic_organism

    Microaerophiles need oxygen because they cannot ferment or respire anaerobically. However, they are poisoned by high concentrations of oxygen. They gather in the upper part of the test tube but not the very top. Aerotolerant organisms do not require oxygen as they metabolize energy anaerobically.

  8. Limpet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limpet

    Some saltwater limpets such as Trimusculidae breathe air, and some freshwater limpets are descendants of air-breathing land snails (e.g. the genus Ancylus) whose ancestors had a pallial cavity serving as a lung. In these small freshwater limpets, that "lung" underwent secondary adaptation to allow the absorption of dissolved oxygen from water.

  9. Biomphalaria glabrata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomphalaria_glabrata

    Biomphalaria glabrata is a species of air-breathing freshwater snail, an aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Planorbidae, the ram's horn snails.. Biomphalaria glabrata is an intermediate snail host for the trematode Schistosoma mansoni, which is one of the main schistosomes that infect humans. [2]