Dare to step on the scaly-foot snail and your foot will probably snap off…probably. |
I present to you the scaly-foot snail, which has evolved a shell made of iron sulfide. I’ll repeat that: It builds a shell out of iron. On top of this, the squishy part that protrudes out of the shell, known as the foot, is covered with iron plates, making the scaly-foot snail more metal than Ozzy Osbourne wrapped in tin foil. And it’s all thanks to bacteria, which seem to be building the armor. No other animal on Earth can utilize iron this way. The thing is magnetic, for Pete’s sake.
This is no ordinary snail, but then again, it lives in no ordinary environment. It’s hanging around hydrothermal vents, where seawater percolates into the crust and is heated by underlying magma, reaching 750 degrees F or more, pouring out and bringing toxins with it. This is a very, very rough neighborhood.
According to biologist Shana Goffredi of Occidental College, among the animals down there are the mortal enemies of the scaly-foot snail: crabs and other snails. “It’s very strange because a lot of snails must have the same kinds of predators,” she said. “So I don’t think there’s anything special about the predatory challenges on them, but still it looks like they have really beefed up their shells for some reason.”
This is what a scaly-foot snail would look like if you tossed it up in the sky and took a photo. But please don’t toss a scaly-foot snail up in the sky and take a photo. |
The scales on the foot serve a rather more righteous purpose. Some predatory snails hunt by firing harpoons into the flesh of fish and other snails and injecting a venom. It’s thought that the iron plating of the scaly-foot snail deflects that missile, like a knight’s armor deflecting a lance.
Weirdly, there are two varieties of the scaly-foot. The other isn’t black, but instead whiter. It lives in the same environment as the Black Knight, yet it lacks the iron. Why?
That’s the working hypothesis, at least. The bacteria hasn’t been cultured in the lab, so we can’t know for sure. “There’s another group that thinks that the snail is making the iron sulfides itself, but that is completely unprecedented,” Goffredi said. “We doubt it, but nobody can know for sure unless we could manipulate either of the players involved. We’re left with speculating.”
Then there’s the bacteria inside the scaly-foot snail. It’s probably serving its host in an even more important way: chemosynthesis. That’s a five-dollar word meaning the snail isn’t eating food, but instead relying on bacteria for sustenance. Its digestive system is practically nonexistent, but it does have a gland—which is 1,000 times bigger than in other snails—where the bacteria live and produce food.
Like the kind of bacteria that builds the snail’s shell, this type takes the chemicals in the neighborhood and synthesizes them into grub for the snail, probably a kind of sugar (this bacteria also hasn’t yet been cultured in the lab, so we’re still a bit in the dark here, too). In exchange for its services, the microbe gets a nice little home to live in.
Read more at Wired Science
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