Snail
Snail is a common name for many species of air-breathing land snails and their aquatic relatives, all of which are mollusks within the class Gastropoda. Most have a single, spirally coiled shell into which the body can retreat. A broad, flat muscular foot powers locomotion, and the mantle secretes the shell and houses the animal's organs. In terrestrial species, the mantle cavity acts as a lung; in many aquatic snails it functions as a gill. The radula, a ribbon-like structure with tiny teeth, is used to feed on plants, algae, or detritus.
Snails occupy a wide range of habitats worldwide, from forests and grasslands to freshwater and marine environments.
Most snail species reproduce sexually; many terrestrial species are hermaphroditic and copulate with other individuals, while
Snails play important ecological roles as decomposers and as prey for a wide range of animals. They