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Food, feeding rates and assimilation in woodland snails

✍ Scribed by C. F. Mason


Book ID
104753609
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1970
Tongue
English
Weight
920 KB
Volume
4
Category
Article
ISSN
0029-8549

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✦ Synopsis


Analyses of the faeces of seven species of woodland, litterdwelling snails (Marpessa laminata, Clausilia bidentata, Oxychilus cellarius, O. alliarius, Discus rotundatus, Arianta arbustorum and Hygromia striolata), showed that all feed predominently on higher plant material, be it living or dead. H. striolata and A. arbustorum took more chlorophyll-containing plant material than the other species, D. rotundatus had a significant amount of fungus in its faeces, while the faeces of O. cellarius and O. alliarius contained significant amounts of animal material.The consumption and assimilation of a variety of foods by molluscs was studied in the laboratory using an ash-ratio technique, which had been shown to give similar results to those obtained by the standard gravimetric technique. The assimilation efficiency of the molluscs was found to be temperature independent, but ingestion rates and absolute assimilation rates were temperature dependent. The assimilation efficiency of D. rotundatus on living plant material (three field layer species) was 44.8Β±4.43% that of H. striolata (Urtica dioica) was 52.4Β±8.78% while O. cellarius and H. aspersa (on Lactuca sativa) had assimilation efficiencies of 70.2Β±4.40% and 53.50Β±6.04% respectively. The results fall within the range shown by other invertebrate groups. The assimilation efficiency of D. rotundatus on leaf litter (a mean of 49.1Β±1.88% on five litter types) was higher than that shown by other invertebrates, probably due to the presence of gut polysaccharidases. The assimilation on dead earthworm as animal material (86.9Β±2.53% with O. alliarius and 78.6Β±6.73% with D. rotundatus) was in the range of true carnivores. Consumption rates were more variable; Urtica dioica, amongst living material, was eaten in greatest quantity; Acer pseudoplatanus, Castanea sativa and Quercus robur litter were eaten in greater quantity than Fagus sylvatica and Carpinus betulus. Consumption was examined in terms of percentage body weight.


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