Previous work has shown that the feet of terrestrial and freshwater sn
ails are important in calcium regulation, often secreting granules of
CaCO3. This phenomenon has not, until now, been observed in marine sna
ils. Here we report the presence of CaCO3 granules in the trail mucus
of Littorina littorea (L.), L. saxatilis (Olivi) and L. obtusata (L.)
Fixed mucus trails on plastic coverslips were examined by X-ray microa
nalysis under the SEM. Of the single-metal granules observed in the mu
cus trails the most abundant were of calcium (means: L. littorea, 440
mm(-2); L. saxatilis, 401 mm(-2); L. obtusata, 348 mm(-2)) followed fo
r each species by silicon (maximum mean density: L. saxatilis, 120 mm(
-2)) and iron (maximum mean density: L. saxatilis, 65 mm(-2)) granules
. Single-metal granules of Al, Ti, Mg and P were also found but only i
n the mucus trails of L. obtusata, perhaps reflecting its different co
llection site from the other two species. The mean size of the calcium
granules showed significant interspecific variation (L. littorea, 1.3
2 mu m diameter+/-0 08 mu m, n = 143; L. saxatilis, 1.80 mu m +/- 0.12
, n = 113; L. obtusata, 2.14 mu m+/-0.09, n = 167). Most calcium granu
les (L. littorea, 80%, n = 35; L. saxatilis, 57%, n = 113; L. obtusata
, 69%, n = 167) were attached to, or embedded within, microthreads of
mucus which tended to run parallel to the direction of locomotion. The
significance of this is unknown although it may imply that the CaCO3
granules are secreted with the mucus. It is concluded that calcium los
ses via this route are too small for pedal mucus to function significa
ntly in ionoregulation of calcium. The calcium in the trail may theref
ore perform other functions, for example indicating trail polarity.