Go to the seaside and escape between the tides. Get sandy toes, listen to the waves - and always, always look for seashells.
A day at the beach isn’t complete without a sandcastle decorated with these marine treasures, or a few in the pocket to bring home. Adorning bathroom shelves and windowsills, seashells are not only fond reminders of a visit to the sea, but they have many secrets to share and stories to tell about the animals that made them and the wonders of their watery world. Any shell, after all, was once part of a living, breathing sea creature. Learn to decipher these hidden messages and you’ll start to see seashells in a whole new light.
Every time you pick up an empty seashell, you’re holding a mollusc’s abandoned exoskeleton, which these soft-bodied animals use as a multi-purpose tool. This is their home, their place to hide, and the attachment point for muscles to help them move. There’s a plethora of shells to find, made by different kinds of molluscs, in habitats all around the UK coasts.
Rocky shores and tide pools are home to lots of sea snails (gastropods) with elegant spiraling shells, including dog whelks and periwinkles. When it’s alive, a sea snail pokes its tentacled head out of its shell’s open hole and crawls along on a muscly foot.
At low tide, limpet-like chitons with ‘coat-of-mail’ shells, creep about under rocks, their shells in eight plates across their backs. Sandy beaches are the domain of cockles, razor clams, and other types of bivalves, each bearing a pair of crinkled and fan-shaped shells that clamp tightly together to keep their soft bodies tucked up inside.
Bu hikaye BBC Wildlife dergisinin July 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye BBC Wildlife dergisinin July 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Jump Around - Bagheera Kiplingi - The acrobatic spider with a predilection for veggie food
Spiders eat flies, right? everyone knows that the 45,000 or so spiders in the world are all obligate carnivores, more or less – eating other animals, mainly invertebrates. Nature, however, loves an exception, and one particular spider missed out on that ecological memo. It goes by the wonderful scientific name of Bagheera kiplingi, and its claim to fame is that its diet is – at least mostly – vegetarian.
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Imagine (or maybe you don't need to) that you hanker after the safari trip of a lifetime in sub-Saharan Africa. A 17-day tour beginning at the iconic Victoria Falls, passing through Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi and Tanzania, taking in some of the continent’s most wildlife-rich national parks, and ending on the lush island of Zanzibar.
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