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10 Most Beautiful Snails In The World - YouTube
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A snail is, in loose terms, a shelled gastropod.
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They have considerable human relevance, including
as food items, as pests, and as vectors of
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disease, and their shells are used as decorative
objects and are incorporated into jewelry.
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As they can be found in a very wide range
of environments, they're bound to exist in
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many varieties.
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For that reason, let's take a look at 10 of
the most beautiful snails in the world.
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Number 10.
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The Red Racer Nerite Snail is an extraordinarily
beautiful freshwater nerite species that is
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native to the Philippines.
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It is among the rarest snail species in the
aquarium world, so it is very seldom available.
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This snail has a highly variable shell appearance,
but its many possible patterns are all among
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the most attractive of any ornamental freshwater
or marine snail.
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They are relatively long-lived among its relatives
where these snails can live up to 4 years.
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As it requires brackish or marine water for
its fry to survive, this snail will not proliferate
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in a freshwater aquarium and it is not known
to have been bred commercially.
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Number 9.
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The clear or perspective sundial snail is
a sea snail found in Indo-Pacific Asia and
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around India, where it often lives among coral
reefs and enjoys sandy seafloors.
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It is an unmistakable snail where the shell
coils usually forming a flat disc-shaped with
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a flat base.
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The spirals are composed of vibrant shades
of black, white and brown, while the body
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and its tentacles are stripped as well to
match the shell.
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Even though the clear sundial snail is a common
species in its range, it is listed as 'Endangered'
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in the Red List of threatened animals of Singapore
as the original shores where they were found
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have been lost to reclamation.
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Number 8.
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The candy cane snail is a species of tree-living
snail native to the Caribbean.
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Typically right-handed with seven or eight
whorls, the background of the shell is white
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with typically 3–6 spiraling stripes of
various colors,
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making it look like this snail has been painted
on.
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Even though it spends most of its life in
trees, the candy cane snail descends to lay
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its eggs in moist soil,
and it consumes various kinds of lichens throughout
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its life as well as twigs and small branches.
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Number 7.
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The red-lined bubble snail is a species of
sea snail that occurs in the sublittoral zone
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of the Indo-Pacific from Japan to Australia
and New Zealand.
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With the length of 20mm, this snail has a
milky-white mantle with iridescent blue edges,
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and shell has a white background with horizontally
spiraling red brown bands which are crossed
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by vertical bands in the same color.
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Unlike many other types of snails, bubble
snails cannot fully retract their soft parts
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into their shells, so their only defence from
predators is great camouflage and a fast getaway.
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It is also thought that this snail consumes
the toxins of its worm prey and stores it
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in its flesh.
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This means larger sea creatures will learn
pretty quickly that this tiny sea snail makes
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a really unpleasant meal.
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Number 6.
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The Zospeum tholussum is a cave-dwelling species
of air-breathing land snail that is very small
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with a shell height of less than 2 mm and
a width of around 1 mm.
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Discovered during a caving expedition in Croatia
in 2012, very little is known about this snail,
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except that they are completely blind and
possess translucent shells with five to six
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whorls.
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They are also extremely slow-moving and may
depend on passive transportation through running
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water or larger animals for dispersal.
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Number 5.
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The emerald green snail or Manus green tree
snail is endemic to Manus Island in Papua
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New Guinea where it lives in trees and inhabits
rain forest areas up to 112 m above sea level.
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The shell of this species is a vivid green
color, which is unusual in snails.
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The green color is however not within the
solid calcium carbonate part of the shell,
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but instead it is a very thin protein layer
known as the periostracum and under the periostracum
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the shell is yellow.
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The shells of this species were in demand
for making jewelry and were popular with shell
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collectors.
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This, and logging of the rain forest where
this species lives have led this species to
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be classified as Near Threatened by the IUCN.
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Number 4.
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Amphidromus is a genus of tropical air-breathing
land snails that can be found in Southeast
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Asia.
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The shells of Amphidromus are relatively large,
from 25 mm to 75 mm in maximum dimension,
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and particularly colorful and polymorphic.
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The genus Amphidromus is unusual in that it
includes species that have dextral shell-coiling
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and species that have sinistral shell-coiling.
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In addition, some species simultaneously include
individuals with left-handed and right-handed
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shell-coiling which is an extremely rare phenomenon.
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Number 3.
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The Liguus tree snails live in tropical hardwood
hammocks and are sometimes referred to as
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living jewels.
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Living in southern Florida and the Florida
Keys, they come in a huge variety of colors
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from white to almost black, wrapped in whorls
of various colors.
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In the dry season, this snail goes into a
form of hibernation where they fasten themselves
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to a branch and seal their shells with mucus
to prevent dying out.
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And when the rains begin again, the water
softens the shell and the creature reemerges.
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Number 2.
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Also known as the purple-ring topsnail, the
jeweled topsnail, is a medium-sized sea snail
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that lives off of the Pacific coast of North
America.
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It can be recognized by its brilliantly colored
shell, which is lustrous with a gold field
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dotted with brown on the spiral rows of grains,
the periphery or lower edge of each whorl
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encircled by a zone of violet stripes.
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The brilliance of the colors fades somewhat
once the animal dies.
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As a marine snail, the jeweled topsnail is
fairly omnivorous, where it feeds seasonally
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on kelp, sessile fauna like bryozoans and
detritus.
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Number 1.
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The Cuban land snail or the painted snail,
is a species of large, air-breathing land
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mollusk that is endemic to Cuba,
where they live mainly in coastal habitats
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in the subtropical forest.
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Reaching a length of about 20 millimetres,
these large shells are shiny and very brightly
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colored.
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Normally they show a bright yellow color with
a white stripe, but the species is well known
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for its colourful shell polymorphism, with
numerous color varieties.
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These shells are sought after by poachers
and used to make jewelry and trinkets.
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As a result, the species has become endangered,
and it is a protected species since 1943 by
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the Cuban legislation which prohibits the
export except for scientific reasons.
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