While a snail has a clear mouth formation complete with a radula, a clam has siphons that obtain food from the water. The siphons are called filter feeders since they "filter" the water. The radula of a snail is used to scrape algae from rocks. Marine snails eat plankton but some are carnivorous and use their radula to drill holes in the shells of other mollusks. Clams move by digging with their "foot" into the sand and burying themselves so that they are camouflaged into the surroundings. The siphons are also used to filter water through in a way of propelling the clam forward. Land snails use the broad foot on the bottom to "glide" across the surface. Mucus secretions aid in the locomotion of the land
While a snail has a clear mouth formation complete with a radula, a clam has siphons that obtain food from the water. The siphons are called filter feeders since they "filter" the water. The radula of a snail is used to scrape algae from rocks. Marine snails eat plankton but some are carnivorous and use their radula to drill holes in the shells of other mollusks. Clams move by digging with their "foot" into the sand and burying themselves so that they are camouflaged into the surroundings. The siphons are also used to filter water through in a way of propelling the clam forward. Land snails use the broad foot on the bottom to "glide" across the surface. Mucus secretions aid in the locomotion of the land