Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

Snail tales, part I


My Brooklyn backyard is a wall- and fence-enclosed concrete rectangle some 14 by 25 feet in size. A metal balcony and stair overshadowed about one third of the space. Very little sun reaches it during the winter, but come spring it is much less like the bottom of a well. In summer, it’s hot and bright on clear days. During the warm months, I grow flowers and vegetables in pots. The soil, enriched with homemade compost, anchors blooms and greens, which in turn are the foundation of an ecosystem I’ve been discovering bit by bit.

One day last July, I noticed several dozen tiny somethings attached to the brick wall outside my bedroom window. At first I thought they were spider prey, all wrapped up and ready for eating. Numerous spiders build sheet-webs in the corners between the metal poles that support the balcony and the house wall. These are horizontal triangles of cobweb, much messier looking than classic orb webs a la Charlotte. Tucked into the far corner of these triangles is a little sack, in which the spider crouches. The webs looked abandoned and existed for weeks (orb web weavers may make a new web every day). The spiders are quite shy, but I occasionally see one out on its sticky killing field.

I’d been wondering what the spiders eat and now I thought I’d found out. But then I looked closer. The little objects were actually small conical shells. They were about a quarter inch long, glossy and lightly amber in color and partially translucent. The snails within were visible as black bodies filling the farther reaches to the shell’s whorl. I consulted my found-on-a-stoop paperback copy of Shells from Cape Cod to Cape May by Jacobson and Emerson. The book, originally published in 1961 as Shells of the New York City Area, notes “The northeastern United States is the only region in the world where practically all the species of larger land snails have shells that are depressed or flat. Cionella lubrica, […] small as it is, still enjoys the distinction of being the largest elongated land snail in our area.” From there I moved to the Internet, to confirm the identification and find more up-to-date information. C. lubrica is commonly called the glossy pillar snail. They are slippery and best looked at with a magnifying glass. Like many of our backyard lifeforms, they are an invasive species. Jacobson and Emerson are right: they are beautiful little things.

And it turns out that these snails have a respectable Internet presence, I mean, for a tiny, unobtrusive creature that might otherwise warm the heart of only a few experts and collectors. But it also happens to be one of the intermediate hosts for a parasite, the Lancet or lanceolate, liver fluke, Dicrocoelium dendriticum. This fluke infects domestic animals (cattle, sheep), and rarely, humans, so its lifecycle is well-documented.

This lifecycle is rather extraordinary. There is a diagram of it on the Center for Disease Control: the snails ingest fluke eggs that get on their vegetable diet via mammal feces; ants pick up the parasite via snail slime, which is one of the ants’ sources of moisture; mammals get it because they ingest infected ants, and around it goes again. But why would a cow or a sheep eat ants? Can the fluke depend on the utter randomness of a ruminant accidentally slurping up an infected ant?
Not quite. Fluke-infected ants are taken over by the parasite, which attacks their nervous system and makes them suicidal. Or zombies, as one entomologist has described the state. At night, an infected ant will defect from the colony and climb up a blade of grass. Attached to the grass, there it will stay until morning if not consumed along with the grass by a passing ruminant. Come daylight, the ant will retire back to the colony as if nothing were amiss, then return to it grassy suicide post night after night until it is scarfed up or dies a natural death.

In the crowded complexity of the web of life, it is awfully easy to digress. One path is quickly crossed over by another, weaving together. The famed biologist E.O. Wilson, has written that it is possible to “spend a lifetime in a magellanic voyage around the trunk of a single tree.” I believe he was thinking of a tropical tree, but it still holds in temperate climates. And the same can be said of a backyard. Even one that is mostly concrete. Even in Brooklyn, where the sight of an animal, say a squirrel in the park, has been known to frighten children.

5 responses to “Snail tales, part I”

  1. […] I googled and found a snail that seems quite similar to the picture above – the C. Lubrica, also known as the Glossy Pillar Snail. It doesn’t say much about its composting uses though. Information on it is generally limited […]

  2. Dear Mr. Matthew Wills,

    Hello, my name is Manami Saeki. I’m a second grade graduate student (of Pro. Akihiko Matsukuma in the Earth and Planetary Sciences) in Kyushu University, Japan. I’m leaving a comment because I’ve hit your blog (written on April 3, 2010), searching the word “Cochlicopa lubrica (glossy pillar)”.
    I’ve been studying a northern land snail, glossy pillar on my master course. My research purpose is to find out geographical origin of this species in Japan, by analyzing its DNA. It’s said the glossy pillar’s populations in Japan are mainly separated into three groups by DNA; one is thought to invade Japan via Russia, the other is via Korean peninsula, and the rest is unknown. I cannot discuss it without specimens from the U.S., but unfortunately I don’t have one.
    Now, please let me make some requests for you. Can you still collect the snails these days in your Brooklyn backyard? Or, do you have preserved animals of Cochlicopa lubrica that might be suitable for molecular extraction (i. e., fixed in high concentrated Ethanol)? If you have some, I would appreciate if you offered preserved the snails, attached by the explanation of such as collected location.
    Excuse me for bothering you at the first contact, but I’m looking forward to hearing from you.

    Sincerely,

    Manami Saeki

    1. Unfortunately, I do not have any samples of these small snails. Since I am not a professional, or even amateur, collector, I do not have any equipment for preserving samples. At the moment, there are not even any snails outside. We had a very hard winter this year, with lots of snow.

      I would suggest looking into the American Museum of Natural History, which is located here in New York City: http://research.amnh.org/iz/staff Also, Professor Orstan at http://snailstales.blogspot.com/ may be worth contacting.

  3. Dear Mr. Matthew Wills,

    Thank you very much for your reply! With your introduction, I sent a message to Prof. Orstan via facebook. It’s sad to hear the situation in your backyard… Is it still cold these days in NY?

    I would appreciate if you send me an e-mail when you see the snails.

    Again, thank you for your warm message!

  4. […] Liver Fluke, which needs snails, bovines, and ants it drives to […]

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