Helix pomatia

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Helix pomatia, known as the Roman snail, Burgundy snail, or escargot, is a species of large, air-breathing stylommatophoran land snail native to Europe. It is characterized by a globular brown shell. It is an edible species which commonly occurs synanthropically throughout its range.

Distribution

File:Helix-pomatia Presence in European countries.png
Distribution map of H. pomatia showing the European countries where the species is present
File:SnailMeeting.jpg
In Odenwald, Germany
File:Helix pomatia eye microscopical.jpg
Helix pomatia, light micrograph of an eye; 1 anterior chamber, 2 lens, 3 retina, 4 optic nerve

The present distribution of Helix pomatia is considerably affected by the dispersion by human and synanthropic occurrences. The northern limits of their natural distribution run presumably through central Germany and southern Poland with the eastern range limits running through western-most Ukraine and Moldova/Romania to Bulgaria. In the south, the species reaches northern Bulgaria, central Serbia, Bosnia and Hezegovina and Croatia. It occurs in northern Italy southwards to the Po and the Ligurian Apennines. Westerly the native range extends to eastern France.[1][2] Currently, H. pomatia is distributed up to western Russia (broadly distributed in and around Moskva),[3] to the south of Finland, Sweden and Norway, in Denmark and the Benelux. Scattered introduced populations occur westwards up to northern Spain. In Great Britain, it lives on chalk soils in the south and west of England. In the east, isolated populations live as far as south of Novosibirsk.[3] Introduced populations also exist in the eastern United States and Canada.[4]

Description

File:Helix pomatia MHNT.ZOO.2002.0.33.jpg
View of a shell of Helix pomatia

The shell is creamy white to light brownish, often with indistinct brown colour bands although sometimes the banding is well developed and conspicuous. The shell has five to six whorls. The aperture is large. The apertural margin is slightly reflected in adult snails. The umbilicus is narrow and partly covered by the reflected columellar margin.[5]

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Ecology

Habitat

In Central Europe, it occurs in forests and shrubland, as well as in various synanthropic habitats. It lives up to Template:Cvt above sea level in the Alps, but usually below Template:Cvt.[5] In the south of England, it is restricted to undisturbed grassy or bushy wastelands, usually not in gardens.[5]

Lifecycle

File:Vinbergssnäcka lägger ägg.jpg
Helix pomatia (left) laying eggs

This snail is hermaphroditic. Reproduction in Central Europe begins at the end of May.[5]

Eggs are laid in June and July, in clutches of 40–65 eggs.[5] The size of the egg is 5.5–6.5 mm[5] or 8.6 × 7.2 mm.[6] Juveniles hatch after three to four weeks, and may consume their siblings under unfavourable climate conditions.[5] Maturity is reached after two to five years.[5] The life span is up to 20 years, but they often die sooner due to drying in summer and freezing in winter.[5] Ten-year-old individuals are probably not uncommon in natural populations.[5] The maximum lifespan is 35 years.[5]

During estivation or hibernation, H. pomatia is one of the few species that is capable of creating a calcareous epiphragm to seal the opening of its shell.

Preference for feeding on the nettle Urtica dioica was found in H. pomatia juveniles in Germany.[7]

Conservation

This species is listed in IUCN Red List, and in European Red List of Non-marine Molluscs as of least concern.[8][9] H. pomatia is threatened by continuous habitat destructions and drainage, usually less threatened by commercial collections.[5] Many unsuccessful attempts have been made to establish the species in various parts of England, Scotland, and Ireland; it only survived in natural habitats in southern England, and is threatened by intensive farming and habitat destruction.[5] It is of lower concern in Switzerland and Austria, but many regions restrict commercial collecting.[5]

Within its native range, Helix pomatia is mostly a common species. It is also considered Least Concern by the IUCN Red List.[8] However, it is listed in the Annex V of the EU's Habitats Directive and protected by law in several countries to regulate harvesting from free living populations.

Uses

The intestinal juice of H. pomatia contains large amounts of aryl, steroid, and glucosinolate sulfatase activities. These sulfatases have a broad specificity, so they are commonly used as a hydrolyzing agent in analytical procedures such as chromatography where they are used to prepare samples for analysis.[15]

Culinary use and history

File:Cooked snails.JPG
Cooked snails are called escargots.

Roman snails were eaten by Ancient Romans.[16]

Nowadays, these snails are especially popular in French cuisine. In the English language, it is called by the French name escargot when used in cooking (escargot simply means snail).

Although this species is highly prized as a food, it is difficult to cultivate and is rarely farmed commercially.[17]

References

This article incorporates public domain text from the reference.[5]

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  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Species summary for Helix pomatia". AnimalBase, last modified 5 March 2009, accessed 6 September 2010.
  6. Heller J.: Life History Strategies. in Barker G. M. (ed.): The biology of terrestrial molluscs. CABI Publishing, Oxon, UK, 2001, Template:ISBN. 1–146, cited page: 428.
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Further reading

  • Egorov R. (2015). "Helix pomatia Linnaeus, 1758: the history of its introduction and recent distribution in European Russia". Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 14: 91–101. PDF
  • Template:In lang Roumyantseva E. G. & Dedkov V. P. (2006). "Reproductive properties of the Roman snail Helix pomatia L. in the Kaliningrad Region, Russia". Ruthenica 15: 131–138. abstract Template:Webarchive

External links

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