Twisted sex allows mirror-image snails to mate face-to-face, research finds

mating snails pr
21 Nov 2017 00:15:00.000

PA 268/17

A study led by the University of Nottingham has found that differently-coiled types of Japanese land snails should in fact be considered a single species, because – against all odds – they are sometimes able to mate, a result which has implications for the classification of other snails.

Although most snails have a right-handed spiralling shell, rare ‘mirror-image’ individuals have a shell that coils to the left. This inherited condition has attracted attention because the genitals of so-called ‘lefty’ snails are on the opposite side of the head, and so it had been thought that normal ‘face-to-face’ mating is difficult or impossible.

But the new research by Dr Angus Davison, and Paul Richards, a PhD student in the University of Nottingham’s School of Life Sciences, published in the journal Evolution Letters, has revealed instances in a Japanese snail where the two types can overcome this seemingly insurmountable barrier - by twisting their genitals to allow them to mate in a face-to-face position. The study also found evidence of this in their genetic make-up

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More information is available from Dr Angus Davison in the School of Life Sciences, University of Nottingham on +44 (0)115 823 0322, angus.davison@nottingham.ac.uk

Emma Thorne Emma Thorne - Media Relations Manager

Email: emma.thorne@nottingham.ac.uk Phone: +44 (0)115 951 5793 Location: University Park

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