Sensory organs of gastropods


The sensory organs of gastropods include olfactory organs, eyes, statocysts and mechanoreceptors. Gastropods have no sense of hearing.

Olfactory organs

In terrestrial gastropods the most important sensory organs are the olfactory organs which are located on the tips of the 4 tentacles. Some terrestrial gastropods can track the odor of food using their tentacles and the wind.
In opisthobranch marine gastropods, the chemosensory organs are two protruding structures on top of the head. These are known as rhinophores. An opisthobranch sea slug Navanax inermis has chemoreceptors on the sides of its mouth to track mucopolysaccharides in the slime trails of prey, and of potential mates.
The freshwater snail Bithynia tentaculata is capable of detecting the presence of molluscivorous leeches through chemoreception, and of closing its operculum to avoid predation.
The deepwater snail Bathynerita naticoidea can detect mussel beds containing the mussel Bathymodiolus childressi, because it is attracted to water that has cues in it from this species of mussel.

Eyes

In terrestrial pulmonate gastropods, eye spots are present at the tips of the tentacles in the Stylommatophora or at the base of the tentacles in the Basommatophora. These eye spots range from simple ocelli that cannot project an image, to more complex pit and even lens eyes. Vision is not the most important requirement in terrestrial gastropods, because they are mainly nocturnal animals.
Some gastropods, for example the freshwater Apple snails and marine species of genus Strombus can completely regenerate their eyes. The gastropods in both of these families have lens eyes.
Morphological sequence of different types of multicellular eyes exemplified by gastropod eyes:

Lens eyes

Statocysts

In the statocysts of Haliotis asinina was found the expression of a conserved gene, which is also important for forming structures for balance in eumetazoans.

Mechanoreceptors

The mechanoreceptors are very crucial to the snail's sensory.