﻿LAND SNAILS. 



17 



end containing the eve disappears first, as tlie end of a glove- 

 finger disappears, when the hand is withdrawn from the 

 glove, the glove turning wrong-side out. 



A B 



Fig. 19. — Showing Snail with Tentaclks ketkacted. A; and Tentacles protruded, B. 



16. Soniethino* niav now be learned as to the wav in 

 which land snails eat. 



By placing before the snail the tender leaves of lettuce or 

 cabbage, the head will be seen to move, as little mouthfuls 

 of the leaf are bitten off. The upper lip of the mouth is fur- 

 nished with a hardened piece called the huccal plate. It is 

 crescent-shaped, and, in some species, the cutting edge is 

 notched, so that it acts like an upper set of teeth, by which 

 it bites off little bits of the leaf. The floor of the mouth 

 is lined with a membrane having upon it rows of little points 

 which enable the snail to rasp and grind its food. These parts 



Fig 20. — Jaw, or Bx-ccal Plate of a Land Snail, highly magnified. — (It can just be 



discerned without a microscope.) 



are so minute that they can be studied only by the aid of a 

 microscope. If the pupil will Avatch his fresh-water snail 



