Scientists discover new species of unusual bright-yellow snail in Florida – and name it after a popular cocktail

A new species of bright snail discovered in the Florida Keys is named after the region’s popular cocktail.

The margarita snail’s distinctive citrus color may help ward off predators, scientists say.

The Keys, a string of tropical islands stretching about 100 miles off the southern tip of Florida, are home to the only living coral barrier reef in the continental US and many animals found nowhere else in the world.

The newly discovered Margarita snail and its lime-green cousin from Belize are the subject of a new study published in the journal PeerJ.

A new species of bright snail discovered in the Florida Keys is named after the region’s popular cocktail

Scientists say the marine snails are distant relatives of the land-dwelling gastropods that often leave slimy trails in gardens.

Nicknamed ‘worm snails’, they spend most of their lives in one place.

Study lead author Dr Rüdiger Bieler said: ‘I find them particularly cool because they are related to regular free-living snails, but when the juveniles find a suitable place to live, they crouch down, cement their shell to the substrate and never move again .

“Their shell continues to grow as an irregular tube around the snail’s body, and the animal hunts by laying out a slime web to capture plankton and bits of waste.”

Dr Bieler has spent the past four decades studying invertebrates living in the western Atlantic, but these particular snails ‘are so small and so well hidden that we have not encountered them before during our scuba diving surveys.’

He said: ‘We had to look very closely.’

Dr Bieler, curator of invertebrates at the Field Museum in Chicago, says the new species belongs to the same family of marine snails as the invasive ‘Spider-Man’ snail that the same team described from the Vandenberg shipwreck off the Florida Keys in 2017.

He and his colleagues, including fellow field museum curator Petra Sierwald, came across the lemon-yellow snails in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, and they found a similar, lime-colored snail in Belize.

The margarita snail’s distinctive citrus color may help ward off predators, scientists say

Dr Bieler said: ‘Many snails are polychromatic – within the same species you get different colours.

‘In a single population, even a single small cluster, one can be orange, one can be grey.

“I think they do it to confuse fish and not give them a clear target, and some have warning coloration.”

He added: ‘At first, when I saw the lime green one and the lemon yellow one, I thought they were the same species.

“But when we sequenced their DNA, they were very different.”

Based on the molecular data, Dr Bieler and his colleagues placed the snails in a new genus, Cayo, after the Spanish word for a small, low island.

He explained that the yellow snail Cayo Margarita was named after the citrus drinks in Jimmy Buffet’s song Margaritaville. The lime snail’s name, Cayo galbinus, means ‘green-yellow’.

Dr Bieler says the Cayo snails share a key feature with another worm snail genus, Thylacodes, for which the team has described a new species from Bermuda called Thylacodes bermudensis.

Although only distantly related, the snails all have brightly colored heads protruding from their tubular shells.

Dr Bieler said: ‘Our thought is that this is a warning colour.

‘They have some nasty metabolites in their mucus. It might also help explain why they can have bare heads – on the reef everyone is out to eat you, and if you don’t have any defense mechanism you’ll be overgrown by the corals and sea anemones and all that stuff around you .

“It looks like the slime might help keep the neighbors from getting too close.”

He added: ‘There have been increases in global water temperatures, and some species can cope much better than others.

‘The Cayo snails have a tendency to live on pieces of dead coral, and as more coral is killed, the snails can spread.

‘This is another indication that we have undescribed species right under our noses.

“This is at snorkeling depth in a very touristy area, and we’re still finding new things all around us.”

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