Spire (mollusc)

Apertural view of the shell of adult Tarebia granifera showing its pale brown body whorl and dark spire.
Very high-spired shells of the sea snail species Turritella communis
Medium-spired shell (live individual) of a European land snail, probably Trochulus hispidus
Very low-spired shells of the land snail species Xerolenta obvia
The sinistral shell of the freshwater snail Planorbarius corneus, a view of the sunken spire, which is held facing downwards in life

A spire is a part of the coiled shell of molluscs. The spire consists of all of the whorls except for the body whorl. Each spire whorl represents a rotation of 360°. A spire is part of the shell of a snail, a gastropod mollusc, a gastropod shell, and also the whorls of the shell in ammonites, which are fossil shelled cephalopods.

In textbook illustrations of gastropod shells, the tradition (with a few exceptions) is to show most shells with the spire uppermost on the page.

The spire, when it is not damaged or eroded, includes the protoconch (also called the nuclear whorls or the larval shell), and most of the subsequent teleoconch whorls (also called the postnuclear whorls), which gradually increase in area as they are formed. Thus the spire in most gastropods is pointed, the tip being known as the "apex". The word "spire" is used, in an analogy to a church spire or rock spire, a high, thin, pinnacle.

The "spire angle" is the angle, as seen from the apex, at which a spire increases in area. It is an angle formed by imaginary lines tangent to the spire.

Some gastropod shells have very high spires (the shell is much higher than wide), some have low spires (the shell is much wider than high), and there are all possible grades between. In a few gastropod families the shells are not helical in their coiling, but instead are planispiral, flat-coiled. In these shells, the spire does not have a raised point, but instead is sunken.

Snails with high spires tend to prefer vertical surfaces while those with low spires prefer horizontal surfaces. This is thought to aid in reducing competition between high and low-spired species in a habitat. Snails with middle-height spires show little preference to surface angle.[1]

Gastropod shells that are not spirally coiled (for example shells of limpets) have no columella.

  1. ^ Cook, L. M.; Jaffar, W. N. (1984). "Spire index and preferred surface orientation in some land snails". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 21 (3): 307–313. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1984.tb00368.x. ISSN 1095-8312.