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The fact that glow worms routinely eat snails is well established. I have on umpteen occasions seen a glow worm making a meal of a snail.

Glow worm feeding on a snail

Till now, however, I had not had an opportunity to actually witness the ‘hunt’. It was during a visit to Old Magazine House, Ganesh Gudi that I got this chance. It was October and the tail end of the monsoon season. The overcast sky and the occasional drizzle were a constant reminder that monsoon was still active.

Despite the drizzle, I stepped out early in the morning, armed with an umbrella, and went down the path leading to the gate of Old Magazine House. I was stopped in my tracks by what I saw on the ground just at the edge of the track – a mass of froth! I was not sure as to what could have created such a large volume of froth.

Froth

I looked around and saw a snail and wondered if the snail could have produced it. But then, I had never heard of snails producing froth.

My attention was drawn to a glow worm moving about actively in the vicinity. There was an adrenalin rush in my system. Was there going to be an interaction between the glow worm and the snail? Will the glow worm attack the snail and devour it? These were questions that were going on in my mind. All these were immensely possible events and I could be a witness to it!

The glow worm came close to the snail, perhaps by using the slime trail that a snail left behind. It walked about the snail and followed it for a while.

Glow worm following the snail.

It attacked the snail once and got its mandibles into the soft flesh. The snail retracted and the glow worm was caught between the body of the snail and the hard shell. It quickly wriggled out and wandered about only to come back to the snail. This time it bit the snail on the tentacle. The snail withdrew only that tentacle and did not evert it to its full length for as long as I observed it!

Withdrawn tentacle after being bitten.

The glow worm after wandering about some more, came back and this time climbed on to the snail’s shell and waited there looking for an opportunity to bury its mandibles into the snail. It did that once and the snail withdrew, resulting in a similar situation as before. The glow worm had to let go and eventually it climbed back on to the shell.

Glow worm riding the snail.

Throughout this drama, I noticed the glow worm continuously cleaning itself. For this purpose it used a brush-like organ (pygopod) on the last segment of its abdomen. This organ is used for both locomotion and cleaning.

Pygopod of a glow worm.

The snail moved a bit and stopped. It also withdrew into the shell more or less completely and started producing the froth again.

Snail withdraws into the shell and produces froth.

The glow worm that was riding the snail dismounted and moved about in the vicinity of the snail.

The glow worm walks away.

It eventually settled down in one place and started cleaning itself continuously for a few minutes. After this intense frantic bout of cleaning, it became motionless and led me to suspect that it was paralyzed or even dead.

The watch continued with a hope that something more would transpire. Eventually, the glow worm became active and started walking about. The snail by now had produced enough froth to cover itself and this froth kept the glow worm at bay. As the morning progressed, the incessant drizzle became heavy and gradually thinned the froth. The snail now started moving about and went on its way. The glow worm did not show any interest in the snail and wandered off far away from the snail.

Only when the snail and the glow worm parted ways, leaving in their wake many unanswered questions, did I realize that I had watched this interaction for over an hour!

  • Seshadri

    Thanks Sar!
    I had seen a snail covered in froth way back in 2007 at Bannerghatta and wondered what it was!
    Your encounter made it clear! :)
    Seshadri

  • http://backpakker.blogspo lakshmi

    What an amazing narration and some brilliant pics..quite a hunt this is

  • http://www.connectwithnature.in Kesava

    Guru-ji

    Super. Excellent information and excellent shots as usual.

    kesava

  • Aishwarya

    Amazing as always

  • http://www.poornimak@wordpress.com Poornima Kannan

    Brilliant Post !
    Thanks for sharing

  • http://anushankarn.blogspot.com Anuradha Shankar

    wow! This is amazing!!! we see a lot of snails near my house, and one of samhith’s favourite pastimes is to watch them. we have even seen such froth near some of the bushes, but never thought that these could have been caused by the snails. never even thought to check it up. do snails routinely bring forth this kind of froth to protect themselves from predators?

  • Anand Pendharkar

    One of the most breath-taking and excellent wildlife write up ive read in ages. Superb natural history – felt like i was reading a fast-paced detective novel. Please put these blogs together into a book… Will enlighten many young souls…

  • chandu

    Didn’t know snails generate froth! The whole story proves the fact that if you are patient nature shows up wonders!

  • http://gravatar.com/deponti Deepa Mohan

    Dramatic action sequence…that most of us would have entirely missed, due to ignorance and lack of observation. Thank you for this riveting tale of the hunter, and a hunted creature keeping the predator at bay.

  • Sadhana Ramchander

    Wow, Karthik, this is amazing! Hats off that you spotted this, persevered, and got the candid photos! But I would like to know…isn’t glow worm a flying insect that glows? As shown here: http://www.shakespeare-navigators.com/hamlet/glow_worm.html

  • jayshree

    A racy read !
    Kept wondering what would happen to the main characters in this natural plot…. they parted ways and happily lived ever after – should like to think …… the science, the visuals , the drama ..needs to come out in a compilation for posterity !
    thnx.

  • http://radha-rangarajan.blogspot.com/ radha

    Oh wow! Loved reading this Karthik!
    A riveting drama this turned out to be!
    Thank you for sharing :)

  • http://www.btsquarepeg.com Vistasp Mehta

    What a wonderful story. .. Made my day.
    Thanks Karthik. :)

  • Aravind Madhyastha

    Dear Karthik,
    This is fantastic natural history observation and it is worth publishing. Apart from glow worms, rodents and thrushes are also predators of snails. The thrushes make hole in the shell and eat soft body part on the other hand, rodents break the shell. Following paper might be helpful.

    http://www.ias.ac.in/jbiosci/sep2011/691.pdf
    The snail is Ariophanta sp (Family: Ariophantidae). One of the common and endemic snail of the Western Ghats.

  • Mahi Puri

    wow! loved the read and pictures!

  • http://www.flutters.org Kishen

    Dear Sir,

    Very interesting post.
    Thanks for the wonderful write-up and photos.

    Thank you,
    Kishen

  • Uma

    Super action sequence! And the pic of the pygopod – awesome macro! Thanks once again Guruji!

  • Roshan

    unbelievable! a glowing account & not at all at snail pace…err…you know what I mean!
    cheers, Roshan.

  • Ashish

    Superb documentation Karthik sir and ofcourse again a new thing to learn about snail’s behavior and that, glow worm feeds on them.

  • Gopi Sundar

    Lovely post Karthik! I’ve seen snails froth up like this when predated by the softshell turtle (Lissemys punctata). Gopi.

  • Rohit

    Hi Karthik,

    I never knew that snails produce froth. Superb post as always! The images are fantastic!!

    Rohit

  • Parimala

    Amazing post Karthik! Such a wonderful experience that revealed lot of information.

  • Vikram

    Fascinating as always!! I really thought glow worms were more benign than this! :-)

  • Viswanath Vittal

    Interesting sir. I wish I had even half your patience to be able to observe nature at such close quarters for such periods of time.

  • Sangeetha

    thank you for bringing these forest tales to us ! A snail & a glow worm… ! Brilliant read !

  • http://www.wildwanderer.com Karthik

    Hello !
    Thanks to all of you.

    Anuradha – Yes, from what I gather, it seems that snails produce froth to deter predators.

    Sadhana – The pic in the link you have given is of a firefly. I suggest you read this http://www.wildwanderer.com/blog/?p=102 and hopefully your doubt should be cleared.

    Aravind – Thanks a ton for the comment on the topic and also for identification of the snail.

    Roshan – Thanks for the lovely pun.

    Gopi – Thanks for adding to the information about frothing snails from your own field observations.

  • http://shivanidiwani64.blogspot.in shivani

    i have never seen a glow worm. Have seen snails and some froth. Thanks for you post i see and know some more.
    Gr8 narration and for once i feel happy that the end was not tragic.

  • Mittal

    Hi Kartik,
    I never knew that glow worms feed on snails or snails producing froth. I enjoyed reading this and next time I come across glow worm moving next to snail, I will try to observe. Thanks so much for sharing this Karthik. As always your narrations on animal behaviour astounds me.

    • http://wildwanderer.com/ Karthikeyan S

      Thanks Mittal. Hope you get to observe the drama first hand !

  • http://anushshetty.com Anush Shetty

    Very Nice post, Karthik.

  • http://www.facebook.com/anushshetty Anush Shetty

    Very nice post, Karthik. Loved this.

  • vidya

    very informative blog! thanks Karthik for sharing your valuable experiences from the field on to a public forum!!

  • Ganesh Kumar

    That was a female, males of Lampyridae are winged