EYES ON STALKS: CONCH WATCH ON ABACO
This is not so much about you looking at, and admiring (without salivating too much, I trust) conchs in their natural element. More about them watching you watching them – and focusing on their rather remarkable stalk-based eyes. Take a look at these examples of the ‘watcher in the shallows‘ (to misquote a well-known book title).
HALF A DOZEN CONCH EYE FACTS TO PONDER
- The eyestalks are attached to an extendable ‘snout’
- The two eyestalks (ommatophores) are retractable within the shell
- Their purpose is to provide a wider field of vision around the shell
- The eyes at the tip of each eyestalk have ‘proper’ lenses, pupils and irises
- Amazingly, amputated eyes normally regenerate completely
- The small projection below the eye is a ‘sensory tentacle’ or feeler
CAUTIONARY WARNING
For a rather depressing view of the current state of conch populations, check out this recent article in the MIAMI HERALD. Not a great deal to be optimistic about…
CREDITS: All remarkable ‘conch watching’ photos by Melinda Riger / Grand Bahama Scuba – except for the wonderful header image by Charmaine Albury (contributor the The Birds of Abaco), taken on Man-o-War Cay; Cindy James Pinder for the heads-up for the Miami Herald article