Cases of Singular Habitat.—Mollusca sometimes accustom themselves to living in very strange localities, besides the extremes of heat and cold mentioned above (pp. [23–24).] In the year 1852, when some large waterpipes in the City Road, near St. Luke’s Hospital, were being taken up for repairs, they were found to be inhabited in considerable numbers by Neritina fluviatilis and a species of Limnaea.[110] Dreissensia polymorpha has been found in a similar situation in Oxford Street, and also in Hamburg, and has even been known to block the pipes and cisterns of private houses. In an engine cistern at Burnley, 60 feet above the canal from which the water was pumped into the cistern, were found the following species: Sphaerium corneum, S. lacustre; Valvata piscinalis, Bithynia tentaculata; Limnaea peregra, very like Succinea in form and texture; Planorbis albus, P. corneus, P. nitidus, P. glaber, and thousands of P. dilatatus, much larger than the forms in the canal below, a fact probably due to the equable temperature of the water in the cistern all the year round.[111] In certain parts of southern Algeria the fresh-water genera Melania and Melanopsis inhabit abundantly waters so surcharged with salt that the marine Cardium edule has actually become extinct from excess of brine. The common Mytilus edulis is sometimes found within the branchial chamber and attached to the abdomen of crabs (Carcinus maenas), which are obliged to carry about a burden of which they are powerless to rid themselves (see p. [78]). A variety of the common Limnaea peregra lives in the hot water of some of the geysers of Iceland, and has accordingly been named geisericola.
Underground Snails.—Not only do many of the land Mollusca aestivate, or hibernate, as the case may be, beneath the surface of the soil, but a certain number of species live permanently underground, like the mole, and scarcely ever appear in the light of day. Our own little Caecilianella acicula lives habitually from 1 to 3 feet below ground, appearing to prefer the vicinity of graveyards. Testacella, the carnivorous slug, scarcely ever appears on the surface during the day, except when driven by excessive rain, and even then it lurks awhile under some protecting cover of leafage. There is a curious little Helix (tristis Pfr.), peculiar to Corsica, which is of distinctly subterranean habits. It lives in drifted sand above high-water mark, always at the roots of Genista Saltzmanni, at a depth which varies with the temperature and dryness of the air. In hot and very dry weather it buries itself nearly 2 feet below the surface, only coming up during rain, and burying itself again immediately the rain is over. Like a Solen, it often has a hole above its burrow, by which it communicates with the air above, so as to avoid being stifled in the sand. The animal, in spite of its dry habitat, is singularly soft and succulent, and exudes a very glutinous mucus. It probably descends in its burrow until it arrives at the humid stratum, the persistence of which is due to the capillarity of the sand.[112] I am assured by Mr. E. L. Layard that precisely similar underground habits are characteristic of Coeliaxis Layardi, which lives exclusively in sand at the roots of scrub and coarse grass at East London.
Rock-boring Snails.—Cases have sometimes been recorded, from which it would appear that certain species of snails possess the power of excavating holes in rocks to serve as hiding-places. At Les Bois des Roches, ten miles from Boulogne, occur a number of solid calcareous rocks scattered about in the wood. The sides of the rocks which face N.E. and E. are covered with multitudes of funnel-shaped holes, 1½ inch in diameter at the opening and contracting suddenly within to ½ inch. Sometimes the holes are 6 inches deep, and terminate, after considerable windings, in a cup-shaped cavity. Helix hortensis inhabits these holes, and has been observed to excavate them at the rate of ½ inch each hibernation, choosing always the side of the rock which is sheltered from the prevailing rains. It does not form an epiphragm, but protrudes part of its body against the rock. That the snails secrete an acid which acts as a solvent seems probable from the fact that red litmus paper, on being applied to the place where the foot has been, becomes stained with violet.[113] Helix aspersa is said to excavate holes 10 to 12 cm. deep at Constantine,[114] and H. Mazzullii is recorded as perforating limestone at Palermo.[115]
Snails as Barometers.—An American writer of more than thirty years ago[116] gave his experience of Helices as weather-prophets. According to him, H. alternata is never seen abroad except shortly before rain; it then climbs on the bark of trees, and stations itself on leaves. Helix clausa, H. ligera, H. pennsylvanica, and H. elevata climb trees two days before rain, if it is to be abundant and continuous. Succinea does the same, and its body is yellow before rain and bluish after it. Several of the Helices assume a sombre colour after rain, when their bodies are exceedingly humid; after the humidity has passed off they resume a clearer and lighter tint.
Production of Musical and other Sounds.—Certain molluscs are said to be capable of producing musical sounds. Sir J. E. Tennent describes his visit to a brackish-water lake at Batticaloa, in Ceylon, where the fishermen give the name of the ‘crying shell’ to the animal supposed to produce the sounds. “The sounds,” he says,[117] “came up from the water like the gentle thrills of a musical chord, or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a moistened finger. It was not one sustained note, but a multitude of tiny sounds, each clear and distinct in itself; the sweetest treble mingling with the lowest bass. On applying the ear to the woodwork of the boat, the vibration was greatly increased in volume. The sounds varied considerably at different points as we moved across the lake, and occasionally we rowed out of hearing of them altogether.” According to the fishermen, the shells were Pyrazus palustris and Littorina laevis. It appears uncertain whether the sounds are really due to Mollusca. Fishermen in other parts of India assert that the sounds are made by fish, and, like those in Ceylon, produce the fish which they say ‘sings.’ The same, or a similar sound, has also been noticed to issue from the water in certain parts of Chili, and on the northern shores of the Gulf of Mexico. Dendronotus arborescens, when confined in a glass jar of sea water, has been noticed[118] to emit a sound like the clink of a steel wire. According to Lieut.-Col. Portlock,[119] F.R.S., Helix aperta, a very common species in South Europe, has the property of emitting sounds when irritated. When at Corfu, he noticed that if the animal is irritated by a touch with a piece of straw or other light material, it emits a noise, as if grumbling at being disturbed. He kept a specimen in his house for a considerable time, which would make this noise whenever it was touched.
The Rev. H. G. Barnacle describes the musical properties of Achatinella in the following terms:[120] “When up the mountains of Oahu I heard the grandest but wildest music, as from hundreds of Aeolian harps, wafted to me on the breezes, and my companion (a native) told me it came from, as he called them, the singing shells. It was sublime. I could not believe it, but a tree close at hand proved it. On it were many of the Achatinella, the animals drawing after them their shells, which grated against the wood and so caused a sound; the multitude of sounds produced the fanciful music. On this one tree I took 70 shells of all varieties.”
Habits of the Agnatha.—Not much is known of the habits and mode of life of the Agnatha, or carnivorous Land Mollusca. In this country we have only two, or at most three, of this group, belonging to the genus Testacella, and, in all probability, not indigenous to our shores. There seems little doubt, when all the circumstances of their discovery are taken into account, that both Testacella haliotidea and T. Maugei have been imported, perhaps from Spain or Portugal in the first instance, along with roots imbedded in foreign earth, for their earliest appearances can almost invariably be traced back to the neighbourhood of large nursery grounds, or else to gardens supplied directly from such establishments.
The underground life of Testacella makes observation of its habits difficult. It is believed to feed exclusively on earthworms, which it pursues in their burrows. Continued wet weather drives it to the surface, for though loving damp soil it is decidedly averse to too much moisture, and under such circumstances it has even been noticed[121] in considerable numbers crawling over a low wall. In the spring and autumn months, according to Lacaze-Duthiers,[122] it comes to the surface at night, hiding itself under stones and débris during the day. Earthworms are, at these periods, nearer the surface, and the Testacella has been seen creeping down into their burrows. The author has taken T. Maugei abundantly under clumps of the common white pink in very wet weather, lying in a sort of open nest in the moist earth. On the other hand, when the earth is baked dry by continued drought, they either bury themselves deeper, sometimes at a depth of 3 feet, in the ground, or else become encysted in a capsule of hardened mucus to prevent evaporation from the skin. When first taken from the earth and placed in a box, the Testacella invariably resents its capture by spitting up the contents of its stomach in the shape of long fragments of half-digested worms.
Fig. 20.—Testacella haliotidea Drap., protruding its pharynx (ph) and radula (r); oe, oesophagus; p.o, pulmonary orifice; sh, shell; t, tentacles (after Lacaze-Duthiers).