The Humble Limpet
The Humble Limpet
The humble Limpet is such a ubiquitous feature of childhood visits to the seaside it’s easy to forget they are indeed animals and not a crusty excrescence of the rock on which they live
Photograph by Jan Holm, taken on Ord Beach, Skye
Yet like many small, overlooked creatures their life cycle and biology is remarkable. They have amazing adhesive powers (as anyone who has tried to remove a limpet from a rock will have discovered), they can change sex, they can fight and flee from predators and their teeth are made from one of the strongest materials known in nature
Limpets are gastropods, like slugs and snails, ad we have three species in the UK – the Common, the China and the Black-footed Limpet. The Common and the China mature as males before subsequently changing to female – although some choose to remain male throughout their lives. Only the Black-footed seems happy to remain in whatever gender it has been designated at birth
Home for a limpet is the ‘scar’ on the surface of a rock, made by grinding the surface to fit neatly around its shell. Limpets leave their ‘home-scar’ regularly to go on foraging excursions, feeding on seaweeds such bladder wrack. Their contribution to our natural environment cannot be underestimated. Without a healthy population of limpets, rocky seashores would gradually be smothered by seaweeds. Limpets are sensitive to marine pollution and are indicators that seawater is in a healthy state. Recently they have also been the target of foraging on a commercial scale. So if you see limpets on the menu check that they have been foraged within ethical guidelines
Susannah Garland