Stuff You Should Know - How Snails Work
Episode Date: December 26, 2023They seem gross and bothersome at first, but once you get down to ground level and get to know snails, we’ll bet you’ll grow quite fond of them. They are living in a whole world we’re largely un...aware of. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Walter Isaacson set out to write about a world-changing
genius in Elon Musk and found a man addicted to chaos
and conspiracy.
I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter,
because he doesn't have a fingertip feel
for social, emotional networks.
The book launched 1,000 hot takes.
So I sat down with Isaacson to try to get past the noise.
Well, I like the fact that people who say,
I'm not as tough on Musk as I should be,
or are always using anecdotes from my book to show why we should be tough on musk.
Join me, Evan Ratliffe, for On Musk with Walter Isaacson. Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the Slowcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
We're just inching along
Doing things our own way our own speed our own time leaving a trail of mucus behind us as we do
Wow an engine long 0.5 inches per second
Yeah, it's like that one guy said life is a highway. I want to ride it all night long, covering only an inch.
Was that the parenthetical of that title? Yeah, it was, it was, uh, you had to read between the lines.
Yeah, exactly. What a great song. Or play it backwards. That's on. You think it's great. Yeah, I do.
I do. If you take away all the, it's actually a great song. It's very upbeat and enthusiastic and very, this is a good song.
Who was that? I don't remember. I think that might have been his only song. Although now I've said that, I'm sure he's a huge sensation in Canada or something and now everybody's going to mad at us. Yeah, that happens a lot. We'll find out.
But anyway, whoever you are out there who made that song for listening,
Breton Cap off to you.
That's right.
Chuck, I picked this one.
He is Canadian by the way.
I knew it, dude.
I knew it.
I said, always happen.
I don't know.
I don't know.
What's his name?
Tom Cochran. I wanted to say Tom,
but I wanted to say Tom Brokall and I was like, I'm not even going to bring that up. And you know
what? He's in the Canadian me. So call it fame. Oh my God. So, so much for that. Okay. At any rate,
heads off Tom Cochran, I think is what I was trying to say, right? So we're doing an episode on snails, which I'm kind of psyched about.
Our new good friend, Allison, helped us with this one.
I believe this is our second one. She's doing great.
Yeah, was this a listener recommendation?
No, this was a Josh recommendation.
Okay. I didn't know if this was, you know, we did some stuff recently with,
kids in the classroom, like little virtual appearances for our book.
Stuff kids should know. And I know we got a lot of ideas and just for some reason I thought snails might have been one of those.
Not a single one of those kids came up with the idea of snails. It was really sad.
Kids he stays, I don't even know what snails are.
Snails, that was, oh, it was my pick and I'm not sure where it came from.
I think I just pulled it out of my head.
But I'm glad I did because this is one of those things where,
I mean, snails are everywhere.
Everyone knows what a snail is.
It's just a part of living on earth.
You know about snails.
And yet, what Allison turned up and I wasn't aware of
when I selected this, there's actually a bit of a
Dirt of information, academic information on snails specifically, and that a lot of what we think we know about them is actually just like
Old yarns that gardeners have come up with over the years. So I love topics like that and actually from researching this
I've come to actually really appreciate snails.
Like, I actually kind of think they're cute now just from watching them in some videos.
Well, I looked up a picture of the, and we'll talk about these in a little more detail
later, but that giant African snail.
And there was one picture of a woman holding one of these things. Yeah.
And I swear it looked like a bunny rabbit with a turtle shell.
Weird.
I've not seen that picture.
It looked like a bunny.
I mean, it's a snail clearly.
It didn't look that much like a bunny.
Right.
I wasn't like, oh, in the world.
Maybe it was eating a bunny.
Is that what it was?
I don't like, what in the world? Maybe it was eating a bunny, is that what it was? I don't think so.
But you were right, Allison was keen to point out that malacology, which is someone who
studies malisks, is just, I guess there's just not a ton of those people out there.
So there just tend to be more people studying, you know, furier, cuter things than snails,
I guess.
Right.
Exactly. you know, furrier, cuter things than snails, I guess. Right, exactly. And even if you do have a lot of malacologists,
they're studying mollusks and snails just make a part of one class of a larger phylum of
melaska. They're part of gastropoda. And it's not just snails and gastropoda, we're talking slugs,
sea slugs, conks, welks, limpets, basically all snail-like creatures are in the gastropoda
class. So they're gastropods? Yeah, they're gastropods. Okay, I didn't know how it was pronounced so.
It's got to be gastropod, right? I mean, I think it's gastropod, but would it be gastropod?
No. There's one of those weird things.
It just flips when you shorten it.
It's that second thing.
Okay. Great.
So I said also Chuck, it's just living on earth.
You're aware of snails and there's a reason for that.
They've been around for a really, really long time.
They are everywhere.
And you can, even if you're walking around Antarctica, and you look
down on the ground, you might see a snail waving up to you, wearing a parka.
Yeah.
And even if, you know, the snails as we will find out, love moisture, even if you're in
the desert, even if you're in Arizona, living there in Phoenix, you might see a snail,
because there's still random water here and there. desert, even if you're in Arizona, live in there in Phoenix, you might see a snail, because
there's still random water here in there.
Yeah, plus also some of them have evolved to really hang on to their water better than
other times, so they can survive in the desert.
It's just nuts.
They're everywhere.
As a matter of fact, they think that there's about 150, thousand gastropods species in total.
And remember that includes slugs and all that stuff.
But they think snail species are between thirty thousand and thirty five thousand.
And I mean, you know, we think of snails as typically like the little garden snail.
Maybe the escargo snail, I think that's the Roman snail if I'm not mistaken.
But there are all sorts of snails.
You mentioned the giant African land snail.
Those things get, I saw that they get to be about the size of a human fist or bigger.
That's a big snail.
But on the other end, there's another type of snail that they recently discovered.
And I think Vietnam and Cambodia on the walls of caves, and
they can fit inside like a grain of sand. They're that small, but if you look at them
under a microscope, they are very clearly stales.
Yeah, I saw about 500 native species to North America, and we're generally going to be
talking about, you know, sort of your average land snail, but there are snails that live
Exclusively in the water under the sea
It would you know, there's just no way we could talk about all the snails
So we're gonna mainly concentrate on the kind that leave that mucusy trail on the sidewalk right like we could probably get through
34,000 species today, but definitely not 35,000
That's right, so we're not gonna dry.
Okay.
So the other thing that's kind of like a bummer about snail species is that as long as
we've been scientifically paying attention to snails, we've recorded more than 400
extinctions of snail species.
And there's an Atlantic short documentary, I think it's like 12 minutes long
I think it's called goodbye snails and it's set in Hawaii where they're
They're experiencing this crazy mass extinction of their native snail species that exist nowhere else in the world
And it's a really kind of a tense little documentary, but the people who are trying to rescue
these snail species prevent them from extinction are really doing some amazing work over there.
Yeah, there's about a thousand of them that are land snails alone that are endangered
right now.
So, that's a lot of species to be in trouble.
So that's no good because
As we will see they can there can be invasive snails and they can do some harm to the garden But they also do a lot of great things for your garden and for the world. Yeah, leave the snails alone
You read them. I have like once or twice. I'm not crazy about them. No, they're not, I'm not a S-car go fan.
I'm a fan of the S-car go joke though.
Right.
Which is, look at that S-car go.
What is that what it was?
What snail painted an S on the side of his car?
That's right, that's a great elementary school kid joke.
Yep, that's wonderful.
I was trying to remember if I've ever I feel like I might have
tried it one time many many many years ago because I do remember seeing snails floating in a buttery
solution on a plate and I think there was a little tiny tongue. Yeah, that's awesome.
It involves, yeah, but I really have a very very faint memory, so if I did try it, I don't
know under what circumstance it was, but it was a long time ago, and it's not something
I'd really be into now. They even have like a specialized plate for serving them, and
it basically doubles as like a devil-thegged serving plate, too. It's like, you know, got
a bunch of depressions in it that the snail sit in. Right. I'd rather have a devil- serving plate too. It's like, you know, got a bunch of depressions in it that the snail sit in.
Right.
I'd rather have a devil egg.
You can also eat snail eggs.
They call it white caviar.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, that's a thing.
There's, I think it's like 130 bucks for about 1.75 ounces.
Wow. Wow.
Well, that's a lot of snail eggs now that I think about it.
Yeah, it seems like it.
I mean, it looks like it comes a little tin like caviar.
But although I do love caviar now,
I don't think I would try snail caviar.
Okay.
Okay, I'll accept that answer.
And I know I've talked about a new-ish to caviar
just past couple of years.
So was it something I ever had until semi-recently?
But now you have it at dinner every night.
I just, you've heard of avocado toast every morning.
I just have caviar toast.
It's all over the biggest piece of sour dough I can.
With gold flakes on top.
All right.
Should we talk about the body of a snail?
Yeah, I feel like we kind of have to because there's a lot of misconceptions people have about
snails, including me as far as their body goes.
Yeah, I mean, we can talk about their shell for a little bit.
They have that, well, we'll talk about the shell kind of throughout.
It's obviously a protective device, snail can pull themselves back into that shell
and they can actually put a little,
I think it's called an epigram.
And that is like a,
it's like a front door basically.
It's a temporary front door that they can put
on the whole of that shell.
So if you ever pick up a snail shell and it's covered with something,
that is a temporary front door that a snail uses
to keep people like you from poking around into that snail shell.
Yeah, and I saw that some of them have denticles on there,
like sharp kind of tooth-like projections
so that if a predator tries to come in there after them,
they'll get all torn up.
Oh, on the epigram?
Yeah, it's like those reverse tire damage things
that like a car rental parking lot.
It's like that from what I understand.
That's pretty cool.
And it also keeps them moist,
because what a snail does not want to do is dry out,
because once again, a snail is basically a slug
with a helmet on.
Right, so I'd like to talk a little bit
about the misconceptions of how the snail body
is arranged if we can.
Let's do it.
Inside that shell is the actual body of the snail.
What we see as the head in the tail
is actually the head, true, but what looks like the tail
is actually like the heel of its foot.
That's what it's moving around on, is its foot, right?
It's single foot.
Exactly.
And so above, on top of that foot is the whole body and all that is encased in the shell.
And what's weird is there's one opening that the, what do you say covers the opening?
The, I think it's called an epigram.
Okay, I'm sorry, I've been saying epigram.
Epigram.
Epigram.
Epigram.
Okay, gotcha.
So what the epigram covers is called the aperture.
And on land snails, there's one aperture.
There's one way in, one way out.
And because all of their body is tucked up in the shell,
they still got a poop, they still got a breath,
they still have to do all the stuff
that requires the outside atmosphere.
And so what they've done is they've figured out
how to double their bodies around,
so that their head and their tail,
including their anus,
are basically right next to one another
at the aperture, at the opening of their shell.
Yeah, kind of like on top of their head.
And this is something called torsion,
which means to twist, you've heard of something,
you've heard of torsion before, probably.
Yeah, Chubby Checker was going to call his dance the torsion,
and he's like, this doesn't have the right ring.
Let's do the torsion.
Right.
Traveler from the future came back in time and
told him, no, we should we should call this the twist, rocked out the high school dance and that was
history. That's pretty good. Did you did you think of that before hand? No. Oh, okay.
No, I didn't. I've just gotten that good this late in the year.
I've just gotten that good this late in the year. Well, I love it.
So yeah, that body basically doubles back 180 degrees
on top of itself.
And there's a lot of debate.
I mean, should we get into that?
Like the great torsion debate?
Yeah, we can at least touch on it, sure.
It's almost impenetrable if you're not a malacologist.
Yeah, I would say so.
So as far as when torsion emerged,
they're not exactly sure,
because you can't tell from like a fossil,
whether or not, you can find a fossil of a shell,
but the torsion is happening within the shell,
so you can't really tell if it's been torsioned,
is that even a verb?
I don't know.
I was going to say torded.
I didn't look it up though, so I think torded, right?
Let's say torded.
Yeah, I think it's torded.
So you can't really tell if it's been torded by looking at a fossil.
And so there's just been a lot of debate.
Obviously, this happened for a reason.
No one knows exactly what that was.
And like you mentioned at the beginning, some of the
sort of old farmer's hails, one of those is you might hear some gardening people say,
oh, well, actually, they're asymmetry inside that shell provides balance, and that's just
not true.
No, no, that's definitely not.
There's also one that back in the day when they were all marine
animals because land snails evolved from marine aquatic snails
that it was a way to keep their
their hindquarters their tails all that stuff from being bitten by a predator.
Probably it does make sense. It's probably not it. What the two biggest competing hypotheses are,
the rotation hypothesis and the asymmetrical hypothesis. The rotational hypothesis,
the one that's been around since like 1929. It basically says that at some point in the past,
the some snail mutant came along
and twisted around during its development
and it became naturally selected
because it was advantageous
because it allowed the snail to retract its head faster
whereas before it would have had to retract the tail
and then the head now it could retract the head
because it's all it had to retract.
Yeah, but that was just like a spontaneous thing, right?
That's what they think.
But it's just such a bizarre thing to have happen,
especially in a single mutation,
because again, what we're talking about
is during the larval development,
a snail's body, it moves counterclockwise
to 180 degrees, and so it's circulatory
and nervous system forms
a figure eight inside the shell.
It's not all just packed in there straight.
It's all over the place.
And because of that weird torsion thing,
the entire right side of its anatomy,
including its organs, are just not there.
It's all left side organ stuff.
It all just got moved over toward the inside of the shell
because the right side is pressed up against the shell itself. And it's all because of torsion and they just
cannot figure out why that would have happened in the past. And clearly, it could have happened
as a mutation that obviously did. But why would it have been naturally selected for hundreds
of millions of years, which strongly implies that it was like an avantageous mutation?
Yeah, I would think so, right?
Yeah, so that's kind of like this debate that's going on that, that is, I mean, you really
have to understand snail anatomy and evolutionary history to go much further in understanding
that debate.
That's pretty much what I could glean from the whole thing.
Yeah, and I would say hesitate even getting into that debate. That's pretty much what I could glean from the whole thing. Yeah, and I would say hesitate even getting into that debate.
If you've had a couple of drinks at the bar and you're feeling a
little squirrely, and you want to dive into this hot conversation,
yeah, I would steer clear.
Just take a break, have another drink, and just relax.
Yeah. Or maybe it's time for you to go home.
Yeah, get a get a car to take you home or walk or or whatever. Yeah, so that's the thing.
Stales tort and we're not sure exactly why but what we do know the upshot of it is that their body is double back on itself and their
their ainess and their head are essentially right next to each other.
Yes, exactly
They also have a mouth, and inside that mouth
is something called a radula.
It's has teeth on it, and it's like a tongue.
And they have, if you look at a snail,
and they turn those two little tentacles to look back at you,
that's because they have eyes mounted
on either one or two pairs of cynicals, and they can
look at you.
They can't hear you.
They don't have ears from what I saw snails are basically deaf, but they can see you.
They can see you, and depending on the species, there's different types of eyes, some have
very simple eyes where they can detect changes in light and dark or maybe, maybe movement. But there's
some kinds I think that have the ability to see you, to focus on you. And because they're
on the ends of those stalks, they can retract the eyes themselves in the stalk and then the
stalk into the head and then the head into the shell. And then when they want to see if danger's gone,
they can peek one of those stocks out
from the shell and look around.
Isn't that cool?
That's pretty cool.
I love it.
And there's also the mantle and the mantle
will come up quite a bit.
And the best I could figure is that mantle
is that area around the rim of the shell
that connects the foot and the head
to the shell itself, right?
Yeah. And it's also whatever holds all of our organs
and guts in place that membrane is very analogous
to the mental tissue of the snail,
because it holds all the organs in place,
but it also does something really important.
It secretes all of the stuff that eventually is built
into the shell itself.
That's right. So, are we at the shell part, do you think?
You know what, this is a good, we're 20 minutes in. I think we should take a break,
because that shell formation is quite a cliffhanger. Okay. And we'll be right back after this. When Walter Isaacson set out to write his biography of Elon Musk, he believed he was taking
on a world-changing figure.
That night he was deciding whether or not to allow Starlink to be enabled to allow a sneak
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What he got was a subject who also sowed chaos and conspiracy.
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And when I sat down with Isaacs in five weeks ago, he told me how he captured it all.
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And it's almost like kids playing on the playground just choose
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My name is Evan Ratliffe and this is on musk with Walter Isaacson.
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Alright, so we promised to talk to you a little bit about the shell. A snail shell is beautiful.
You should never, ever, ever smash a snail shell or a snail, because that's animal cruelty,
and it's a terrible thing to do, so just don't do it. But it is basically, there's a little bit
of protein in there, but it's mainly something called calcium carbonate, and it is, like you said,
or earlier, secreted by that mantle tissue. And it builds up over time.
If you look at the center part of that shell,
that's the oldest part of the shell.
You can tell a snail's age by how big that shell is.
And that's also the hardest part of the shell
because it's been around longer.
So they just keep adding material along that outer edge,
little by little, as it expands outward.
And that is why the outer edge of
a snail shell will be much more breakable than the inside, harder part.
That makes sense.
So the oldest part is the close to the center.
Yeah.
Apparently also, I didn't realize this.
They're born with a tiny shell already attached.
They just grow it over time by secretive starter shell.
Exactly. In that cute, they're born like little tiny baby snails,
like that pre-formationism theory from our things we used to believe before the scientific method episode.
That's right.
So I also said Chuck the mantle tissue holds all the important guts and stuff
like that in place.
And the way that snails breathe is through the mantle cavity.
They have blood vessels in there, but they breathe using kind of like a primitive, I don't
want to say long, I think that's kind of a stretch, but basically they have an opening
that they-
It's called the long, I've seen it called the long end diagrams.
Okay, so I've also seen it called a new, uh, new mastome.
And it's essentially a breathing port that they can open and close using their muscles that
takes in, uh, takes in air and exhales air, but it's pretty neat.
And it's right there next to their head, right there at the aperture where everything else
that needs to be outside is.
Yeah. And they can, if you were talking about, uh about sea snails, like I said, we're not going to get too into them,
but they can have similar body parts in terms of breathing, or they can also have gills kind of up front as well.
Yeah. So one of the things snails are most famous for is their mucus, right?
Yeah. That is apparently secreted by the foot.
And as the foot moves along,
it's just a series of muscles that just kind of propel
as they ripple propel the snail along,
but they lay down a trail of mucus
that does a lot of different things.
For one, it allows the snail to do some spider man-esque moves,
like just crawl right up the side of a building
because it's very strong, it's glue-like. Yeah, but it can be, it's funny because it can be glue-like
or act as a lubricant. Exactly, it's pretty remarkable. Yeah, so yeah, it also separates the snail
from the rest of the world that it's running over. You know, it's strong like glue, but it also allows the snail to move smoothly, and it
also protects the snail's body from sharp things that it might be crawling over, slowly
crawling over.
And it also keeps the moisture locked inside, so much so that snail mucin, as we'll see,
has been used for millennia, a kind of a skin thing.
If you have very dry skin and you can get your hands
on snail mucin or mucous, it will cure your dry skin.
Yeah, I mean, that's what keeps the,
I mean, that and other things is what keeps that snail moist.
So if it's keeping the snail alive,
then imagine what it can do for your crow's feet.
Exactly.
I don't think we said what was actually made of.
It's enzymes, peptides, proteins, trace minerals.
And it's pretty remarkable stuff.
It's the tail tail sign is when you see that stuff on the sidewalk.
And just the term snail trail itself, that sort of snappy, glistening, shiny snail trail is, you know, it's become sort
of part of the lexicon, you know, as a stand-in for other things at times.
So yeah, for sure.
So one of the other things that the snail trail, the mucus trail does is it says says, hey, sailor, come come this way.
Right.
Because it's one way that snails find one another to mate, which is surprising that they
mate because they're hermaphroditic.
They both all snails are most species of land snails are equipped with both male and female
sex organs.
And when they come together to mate,
there's no telling who's who or who's doing what, because in the end, both of them often come away
with fertilized eggs.
Yeah, I mean, to me, this section
is the most remarkable stuff about snails.
How they reproduce is just amazing.
They are hemaphyritidic because, and it just makes sense,
if you're moving 0.5 inches per second,
you would die out as a species if you,
if like a male had to search for a female
or the other way around.
So they basically just double their chances
of finding somebody within the, you know,
10 feet or so that they're wandering around. I mean, they move more than that within a lifetime, obviously, but, you know, 10 feet or so that they're, they're wandering around.
I mean, they move more than that within a lifetime, obviously, but, you know, if it's that time of year, which is what like autumn,
share autumn and spring, autumn and spring, they're going to wander around.
They're going to find another snail.
They're going to dance around each other.
And that just means very slowly circle each other.
For I saw four to six hours, I saw the whole thing can take up to 12 hours.
It's a very obviously as you would imagine a very slow process.
It is slow but it's really involved. They are really into it while they're going at it.
Yeah, I mean, and this is before they're going at it. Yeah, I mean, they're, and this is before they're going at it.
This is when they're just sort of like
sizing each other up.
They're getting their steam.
They're touching tinnacles.
They're biting each other's lips.
Things are getting really pretty hot and heavy in there.
And then they have something that is amazing.
And I don't know of any other animal
that has something like this.
They have something called a love what they call a love dart.
A love dart only forms after the first mating. So you have to have at least a little bit of sexual experience to even form a love dart.
Sure.
They take about a week to form and you don't always have to have one to mate because
if you've used up your love
dart and then you know within the week you want to go at it again you can still
do that it's not necessary for reproduction but it helps in reproduction they
form in the dart sack and is stored in a dart sack and if you look at it it's
a little it is a little dart it's got this little sharp harpoon-like tip.
And they actually, it says they shoot it, but it doesn't fly through the air.
It's more like a, they stab one another with it.
Oh, I imagine it like, pew, and then just sailing a couple feet and then sprowing.
That would be great.
It's more like a stabbing, but it apparently is very imprecise.
This hydraulic pressure builds up as they circle
and bite each other's lips and then they shoot
this thing out at each other.
And I think about a third of the time
it doesn't even do what it's intended to do,
which we'll get to in a sec,
but it can pierce organs,
it can go all the way through the head
and out the other side.
So it's really crazy.
It's a weird adaptation. Yeah, no So it's really crazy. It's a weird adaptation.
Yeah, no, it's super weird.
And I think what's most weird about it to me
is there's other animals that do that to deliver sperm.
That's not what the snails are doing.
These love darts deliver other hormones
that help protect the sperm
as it makes its way to the eggs to fertilize.
It's like a really clumsy, superfluous, extra step that, like you said, doesn't even,
like they miss a lot of the time. They still manage to fertilize eggs. It's just a very
strange thing that they do, but it's part of this really long, really slimy, courtship mating
really long, really slimy courtship mating process
that they get involved in. And then the sex itself is like,
just one rubs its foot against the other foot,
and there you go.
Right, and they say, who's pregnant?
Which, and they go, I don't know,
maybe both of us.
Yeah, both of us.
Actually, can it be both?
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Both can walk away with fertilized eggs after this.
Yeah, and they can lay I think they can hatch up to 450 eggs per year
And when and that doesn't take very long actually right in the gestation period
It can be like really short, right? For some species especially in captivity. It can be 24 hours
Others it seems like the outside is four weeks,
and usually in the wild, it's like two to four weeks
for gestation.
Yeah.
And once those little guys are born,
they may immediately start eating the rest of the eggs
as their first meal.
Yeah, it's kind of a bummer, especially because leading up
to it, it's so cute.
It's a little tiny snail with its little tiny shell
is inside its egg, and it starts tapping its way out till it cracks through the egg and then yeah, it gruesomely eats its
siblings very quickly. Sometimes it'll eat smaller siblings that have already hatched, not just the eggs.
What I didn't realize though is that some, and that's actually not all snail species,
that's ones that will eat eggs,
but for the most part they'll eat just vegetation.
Yeah.
The snail parent will often stay nearby
to provide protection for the young snail hatchlings
for a little while.
Yeah, they hang out for a while, right?
Yeah.
It did not realize that.
I thought that was pretty cool.
Yeah, they can hang out for up to three months together while the parents are kind of protecting
them. Like you said, they're born with that little baby shell and just gets bigger and bigger.
Did we talk about how long they can live?
No, we didn't. It's pretty spectacular.
In the wild, they can live up to five years, which that shocked me quite frankly.
Yeah, really much. I feel bad for all the snails you've accidentally stepped on after a rainy evening.
You hope at least they were old.
Yeah, exactly like they had their time.
Yeah, so five years is pretty long time in the wild, I think.
In captivity, they can live up to 25 years, which is astounding.
Yeah, there's a really great little short documentary called the Strange and Wonderful
World of the Snail Wrangler.
It's on YouTube, and it's about this woman who takes photos of her snail friends in like
little miniature settings, human settings.
It's really cute.
She talks about one of her snail companions that she's been with for like 10 years.
And it's just, I mean, when you think of it like that, like snails are just so, they're
off doing their own thing.
They live in a world far different from ours, even though we share the same geography.
It's just a different world.
So when you cross paths with one, you're like, hey, alien.
And they're probably like, hey, giant alien.
And that's it.
The idea that they're there in that same patch
As long as you are in some cases when you're like if you live at a house for 10 years a snail
Might have lived there just as long as as you did for the same time
Like you shared that with them that whole time. It's they're not just anonymous generic animals running around
They're I mean anything that lives that long. there's just something more substantial to it than, than, than you would think initially.
Are you saying that snail has a soul?
I think it's pretty clear. Yes.
All right. So snails are doing their things.
I love this account that Allison found.
There was a scientist from Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Natural History that said snails are leaky bags of water that survive
on dry land. And it almost sounds like they're saying like they happen to survive. Because
it doesn't seem like a snail was really made for that environment, but they survive anyway, because snails really need to stay moist,
like a snail drying out, just like a slug, means certain death.
So even though there are snails in the desert, you're mainly going to find snails in more
moist areas.
We're going to say that word quite a bit, I apologize.
I was going to say, unlike humans, moist is a snail's favorite word.
It really is.
They do live on the ground mainly if they're terrestrial snails, but they can live in trees,
but they really like it down there on the ground in that sort of moist outer layer of the
king plant matter.
They're pretty active at night because things can get wetter overnight, as we know, like
when you wake up with morning dew and stuff like that.
So they're just down there on the ground, sometimes eating meat and other snails and other
eggs, but generally what they're doing is eating and munching down on that either decaying
plant matter or if you have a garden, they will also munch down on your nice new fresh
plants.
Yeah, and as we'll see that they run a foul of gardeners for that reason, but just hold
your horse's gardeners, put your rubber mallets away for a second until we get to that part
and talk you out of it.
But in that leaf litter layer, they do a lot of really important stuff.
They are in charge of like recycling plant matter, decaying stuff. They are in charge of recycling plant matter, decaying stuff, they love decaying
everything. In addition to live plants too, they love dead plants. And when they're doing
that, they're like recycling nutrients. They eat that stuff, they break it down and they
poop it out. And that means it's bioavailable in the soil for plants to use, for other animals to come along
and like that, like to lick the dirt, that kind of thing.
They also are really important in the food web
because calcium is not really easy necessarily
to come by in food.
At least if you're like a small,
like an inverter or a mammal or something like that.
If you eat a snail shell, you get a burst of calcium. So that snail shell is really important. And then they're also chock full of protein themselves. So they're like a really important part
of any food web in the ecosystem that they live in.
Yeah, they're also moving stuff around down there. I mean,
plant matter and that outer layer that just sits and sits isn't great, but if
you've got thousands of snails moving around through it, it's going to help drainage out,
it's going to help keep distributing those nutrients.
If there's, you know, it can help move dirt and clay even.
It's very important.
All that stuff is great.
And they can actually help pollinate too.
Some of them are nighttime pollinators.
They get in there with that plant nectar.
They eat that stuff and then they poop that out as well.
Yeah, pretty crazy.
I had no idea that they were pollinators.
It just makes them even more important, you know what I mean?
Totally.
So I think Chuck, we take a break and then we come back and talk about why you should
leave the snails alone.
How about that?
Let's do it.
When Walter Isaacson set out to write his biography of Elon Musk, he believed he was
taking on a world-changing figure.
That night he was deciding whether or not to allow Starlink to be enabled to allow a sneak attack on Crimea.
What he got was a subject who also sowed chaos and conspiracy.
I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for social emotional networks.
And when I sat down with Isaacson five weeks ago, he told me how he captured it all.
They had Kansas spray paint,
and they're just putting big axes on machines.
And it's almost like kids playing on the playground,
just choose them up left, right, and center.
And then like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,
he doesn't even remember it,
getting the bars, done, excuse being a total f***.
But I want the reader to see it in action.
My name is Evan Ratliffe, and this is On Musk with Walter Isaacson.
Join us in this four-part series as Isaacson breaks down how he captured a vivid portrait
of a polarizing genius.
Listen to On Musk on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Cheryl McCollum, host of the Col. K's podcast, zone seven.
Join us every Wednesday to hear cases like the Long Island Serial Killer.
Here, Carrie Rossin, daughter of the notorious Serial Killer BTK,
weigh in on the accused Long Island Serial Killer's children.
You show like genuine interest and you can't fake it.
These guys can see like right through to your soul.
So you have to be like walled off, prepared.
And if you don't know your stuff,
they're gonna just call you out.
And they're gonna be like,
nope, I'm talking to somebody else
and not talking to you.
Here great insight from one of New York City's finest
detective Joe Jackalone, a Col. K. Secksburg.
You know, as well as I do, cops weren't even aware of it back then.
So they're going to have some difficulty putting those cases together,
unless, of course, he confesses.
Listen to Zone 7 with Cheryl McCollum on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Get ready because Aaron and Karissa from Calm Down have got something special
coming up at State Farm Park in I Heartland, a reading of Twisted Night Before Christmas.
They'll infuse it with stories and memories tying into the holiday spirit.
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Afterwards, stick around and check out all the exciting things State Farm has to offer.
Say hi to Jake from State Farm on the big screen and try to be Jake's core at the parkour minigame. Visit iHeartRadio.com
slash iHeartland to start playing today. So, one thing that we said earlier Chuck was that snails run a foul of gardeners.
And the reason why is because they will, I mean, they will eat a lot of plants.
The Burgundy snail also knows the Roman snail, the one that's mostly used for escargot these
days.
They weigh 20 grams, as an adult,
but they'll eat six grams of plant matter in a day.
You have a bunch of burgundy snails running around your garden.
They're gonna eat your hostas,
they're gonna eat your seedlings,
they're going to tick you off.
And so there's a lot of animosity that gardeners have
towards snails and slugs too.
And so people have been trying things to get rid of snails for a very long time.
The problem is, number one, you don't actually want to get rid of snails, especially native
snails or common garden snails.
And number two, the methods typically used are chemical and they can harm other life as
well.
So there's basically, you want to leave the snails alone
as much as possible.
Yeah, there is some information here that Allison got
from the Royal Horticultural Society in Britain.
And they say, you know, don't use chemical pesticides, please.
Like if you want to get rid of your snails,
you can try and do so naturally by introducing predators.
I guess, you know, you throw a bunch of garden beetles out there
and see what happens.
Sure.
Just say whoever walks out of here alive
is, you know, deserves to live.
It's like the thunder dome.
Exactly.
Two-incher-one leaves.
As a matter of fact, if you're bored, just go ahead and build a small scale replica
of the Thunderdome and put the snail in the beetle ant.
You sicko.
That's right.
But then you have to act like Tina Turner and use that voice when, hello ragally snail.
That's what you would have to call it.
That was a great impression by the way Chuck. Thank you.
In addition to putting them in a death match against Beatles, you can go pick them out
yourself.
If you go out at night with a flashlight, you can pick up plenty of snails.
The thing is, you put them in your neighbor's garden.
Yeah, exactly.
Especially if they're a jerk, hostile grower.
They'll really drive them crazy.
Now, what you want to do is put them on your compost pile
because again, they like decaying stuff
and they're really useful.
So they'll be pretty happy there.
And you can also trap them by carving out like melons
or grapefruit or something like that
and they'll be attracted to that.
And it's just basically acts as a trap.
You just throw it back on your compost pile
the next day and there you go.
All right.
Some people do say you, some people still use pesticides.
If you're organic, you use ferric phosphate, which interrupts their ability to digest
so they die of starvation in a few days.
There's another one called metalldehyde.
That is hardcore stuff.
It desiccates them, they end up dehydrating to death.
And it's banned in the EU because they consider it
unacceptably harmful to birds and mammals.
Of course it is.
Here in the US you can use it as much as you like.
Of course you can.
And they use it for the giant African land snail in particular because again, Matteldehyde
is hardcore stuff and it turns out that the giant African land snail is hardcore snail.
Yeah, it's a hardcore snail.
Obviously, it would be an invasive species here in North America.
These are the big ones, the one that look like a bunny I thought.
They can be eight inches long. They eat more than 500 species of plant, they will eat everything
in their paths, including in Florida, they're a real problem in Florida apparently.
They will eat the stucco off your house to get more calcium and they can pass disease
along to people and animals.
Yeah, rat lung worm.
Yeah, meningitis.
I've seen that they can carry a host of parasites or they can host a host of parasites.
Wow.
Some of which is good for the snail because it keeps animals from eating them.
So it's like a defense mechanism.
Right.
But that can be harmful to people at times as well.
Yeah, yeah, you don't want longworm.
Like you said, it can create meningitis in humans.
So it's best to not really handle snails
with your bare hands.
And especially don't eat the snail alive
from your garden.
That's a really bad idea.
Yeah, but people actually collect,
and I'm not sure if that's how they got here,
but people collect these, you know,
as an illegal pet, these giant African land snails.
That's my understanding that they were imported
as illegal pets, at least to South Florida.
In the world.
Are people doing?
I don't know, but they also have been,
have shown up in some other places,
including Hawaii and Polynesia.
And somehow they got from Florida to these places, probably through the illegal pet trade.
And so, in just typical human fashion, in the 50s, people said, well, wait, there's this
snail called a rosy wolf snail. And it's a predator, it's a little, literal snail predator.
Let's just import a bunch of them to take care
of this giant African land snail,
because I'm sure nothing will possibly go wrong
because of this plant.
It's foolproof, and that's what they did.
And as a result, Hawaii has lost almost all
of its native snail species in the wild,
because the rosy Wolf snail was like,
I'd just rather eat these other kinds of snails
and leave the giant African snail alone.
Yeah, these things are pretty creepy though.
I imagine there's got to be some kind of
nat geo video of the Wolf snail,
like following its prey because for a snail, they're moving pretty fast.
When they're tracking something, they go double to triple their normal speed.
They will go up a tree after something.
They will go underwater after something for a little while, until they need to come up.
It seems like they're just tenacious little fellas, and they will go after something until
they catch it.
Yeah, and they like to swallow other snails whole, including their shell.
Wow.
And there's a malacologist named Harry G. Lee, who dissected a rosy wolf snail and found 13 other
snails shells in its gut.
Yeah, that's a lot.
That's a lot.
It's like in a Louisiana state license plate.
Yeah, exactly.
So yeah, you don't want these things
on your beautiful pristine island.
And once you bring them in, they're
going to cause all sorts of problems.
And that's what that goodbye snail video was about.
It's definitely worth watching.
But the Rosie Wolf snail is definitely considered invasive.
And what I didn't know, Chuck, is the common garden snail.
The one we're so familiar with is considered invasive in the United States.
Cornue espersum, poof, that is the common garden snail and it was originally imported because
it was the one that used to be escargot and some of them escaped from farms and set up shop
in the wild and now it's called the common garden snail
because it became so prolific.
Yeah, and they don't know when people started eating escargot.
And I think escargot is the French name
for that edible snail and also doubles
as the name of the dish.
Right, yeah, yeah, I think you're right.
Like a French boss.
I think it's both. Yeah. But you yeah, yeah, I think you're right. Like a front box. Yeah. But,
you know, people like this stuff, it was always, you know, growing up, you always heard
about escargot was like this, you know, sort of as a kid, the first fancy weird food you'd
heard of, probably. Like, do the wealthy have no bounds, kind of, right? Exactly. And then, you know, we've got all signs, should we finish up with just a bunch of kind of cool
factoids? Yeah, for sure. Well, jewelry, snail shells have always or have long been used as jewelry for humans. It's some of the oldest known human
jewelry. They found this stuff like necklaces and stuff made of sea snail shells
that date back at least 120,000 years.
That's nuts, man.
Yeah, what else?
The author, Patricia Heismith, who was a very interesting person in her own right, she
wrote the strangers on a train and the talented Mr. Ripley novels. She was a snail pal, like
the snail wrangler in that video that I talked about pal, like the snail wrangler in that video that I talked
about. And like the snail wrangler in that video that I talked about, she would go out
and public with her snails as companions. There's a story of Patricia Heismith at a party
who was revealed to have dozens of snails in her purse, who she brought, so she'd have
someone to talk to, her snail friends.
Yeah. How about that?
How about that?
That's what snail people do, is that kind of thing.
Yeah.
This is really interesting, is they've been studying how snails
might help us figure out Alzheimer's disease.
From what I found is they've, you know,
we've talked about Alzheimer's before,
which is when you have these amloid plaque buildup,
or plaques, I guess, that buildup on the brain tissue.
And they don't exactly know how it causes memory loss, but this is what they're trying to figure
out with the snails.
These plaques are formed from a protein called amyloid beta, which we've talked about
or a beta.
And they have taken a beta and put it on otherwise very healthy pon snails. I have
no idea why they chose like why they thought that the pon snail was good candidate to begin
with. Terrible lobbying group. Maybe that's what this, but they put this
a beta on these healthy pon snails and within 24 hours, they show evidence that they have harmed their memory, basically.
But the finding is that they haven't found any damage to the brain tissue, like no cell
loss, no brain tissue damage at all.
So basically what they have sort of, you know, the result of all that is that a beta by
itself can trigger the memory loss and it's not from like damage to the brain
or like a deterioration of the brain.
Or the plaque buildup, right?
Yeah, exactly.
They think it's like a specific pathway
for memory that's being damaged
and not the brain itself.
Thank you, pond snails.
I know, it's amazing.
I also saw it goes the other way too,
that the common garden snail's mucus
has been found to be bioactive
as an anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and anti-apoptic, which means it prevents cell death.
Oh, wow.
So they think that they are figuring out how to turn that into a drug to treat Alzheimer's
too.
So snails are just coming at us with the one, two-punched, a battle Alzheimer's disease.
Yeah.
God bless them.
I love it.
Speaking of God bless them, if you're a,
subscribe to the West African, your Rubah religion,
you would say God bless the snail because they're associated
with Obatala, the skyfather, as well as the Orishas,
collective deities to whom the land snail,
the giant African land snail in particular, is sacred.
I got to read this last thing. This is the only last thing I got.
This Nigerian snail recipe.
I'm not into eating snails, they call this Congo meat.
It's got red pepper, habaneros, garlic, onion,
and then a season with cayenne and ground crayfish.
Yeah, you lost me a habanero, but it does sound extremely interesting. I would try it. I'd just be like,
can you leave the habanero? Too hot. Too hot. Yeah. Too hot for the hot tub. Yeah, too hot for TV.
So I've got one more thing, Chuck. Let's hear it. There is a weird thing that started popping up at the end of the 13th century in Northern
France.
If you look through illuminated manuscripts, meaning manuscripts that have doodles in
the margins and all that, like a mad magazine, you will start to notice there are pictures
of knights battling giant snails.
Oh yeah, that's so interesting.
And they, it lasted for like a hundred or so years as like a trend.
It actually came back again for a little while in the 15th century.
And no one has any idea what they were trying to say.
One of the theories is that it's just hilarious that it was many kind of comic relief
while you're reading like this kind of heavy texture. Whatever you just look over and you're like, that's a
night battling a snail.
Right, yeah.
Other people say that snails symbolize something like superhuman strength because they carry
their house on their back.
I kind of poo poo that one.
I like this the comic relief one.
And people are just like, hey, this is funny.
Look at this, this night's fighting a snail.
Yeah, this will be good for a laugh, said the medieval monk. Very interesting.
I say so too. So if you want to know more about snails, everybody, go forth, research them.
You could do worse than watching the strange and wonderful world of the snail wrangler and
goodbye snails. And if you say a snail in your garden, and especially if it's not doing
anything to harm things, you just tip your hat to it and say, good day, snail. You could be as much as five to ten years old.
That's right. It's okay, that's right. It means it's time for listening to mail.
Yeah, we're gonna do a correction. I wish we could get this one out sooner because we're
gonna continue to get emails about the great isotope ion.
My goodness.
Issue.
Which I didn't know was an issue.
This is, we got a lot of them,
but this is from Nick Luffy, a PhD student at UC Irvine.
And Nick is getting a PhD in quantum chemistry.
Oh, wow.
Me and I wanna hang out with you, Nick.
Shhh.
And Nick listens with his wife, Dina.
Hey, Dina.
And said, can't wait till we're in town for a show,
but if you're at Irvine, I mean Irvine,
how far is that from San Francisco?
I am, you know, I do.
I mean, it's in the state of California,
so it's gotta just be like an hour away, right?
Exactly, yeah, everything in California is an hour away.
Come see us.
Hey guys, wanted to offer slight correction
about the periodic table.
Don't hate me.
When you mention the different weighted averages
being a result of different isotopes,
you mentioned that it is the loss or gain
of an electron that constitutes the different isotopes.
This is actually incorrect.
What you've defined is an ion, not an isotope.
It is the varying number of neutrons that makes up the different flavors of isotopes.
This is the thing that makes carbon dating possible.
Love that episode, by the way.
Last thing, guys, chemistry as a whole is a very inaccessible branch of STEM.
I hated it.
I failed my first chemistry class in
one day. Our professor was out sick in the chair of the Kim Department came to sub-in
and she implored us to get a PhD in chemistry. I said to myself, she must be nuts. Here
I am, ten years later, and I am clearly the one who was nuts. The long and short of this last bit is to never give up on science.
Nice. And that again is from Nick. I think it's a lefty, but it's actually luch-fe.
Okay. Like Chipotle. Which is Chipolte? Yeah, that's right. Thanks a lot Nick. We'll call him Nick L
from now on. Yeah. That was a great one. So everybody who wrote into Let us Know, we appreciate you for doing that because we like
to get things right.
And that was definitely a slip up and it is something that we needed to correct for
sure.
So good job Chuck, picking that one.
Yeah.
Well, if you want to get in touch with us and let us know we got something wrong or we
got something right or tell us something about yourself or your dog or your pet goat
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favorite shows.
Walter Isaacson set out to write about a world-changing genius in Elon Musk and found a man addicted to chaos and conspiracy.
I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for
social, emotional, networks.
The book launched a thousand hot takes, so I sat down with Isaacson to try to get past
the noise.
I like the fact that people who say I'm not as tough on musk as I should be are always using anecdotes from my book to show why we should be tough on musk.
Join me, Evan Ratliffe, for On Musk with Walter Isaacson.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Cheryl McCollum, host of the Colkays Podcast Zone 7.
Join us every Wednesday to your cases like the Long Island Cereo Killer.
You show like genuine interest and you can't fake it.
But these guys can see like right through to your soul.
So you have to be like prepared.
If you don't know your stuff, they're gonna just call you out.
Listen to Zone 7 with Cheryl McCollum
on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Get ready because Aaron and Karissa
from Calm Down have got something special coming up
at State Farm Park in I Heartland,
a reading of Twisted Night Before Christmas.
Bell and Puse it with stories and memories,
tying into the holiday spirit.
Don't miss this special event, starting Thursday,, December 7th as 7 p.m. Eastern
as State Farm Park and I Heartland in Fortnite available all weekend long. Afterwards, stick
around and check out all the exciting things State Farm has to offer. Say hi to Jake from
State Farm on the big screen and try to be Jake's core at the parkour minigame. Visit
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Visit ihardradio.com slash ihardland to start playing today.