Dog whelk

Nucella lapillus
  • Where it lives:

  • Non native species

About

With a pointed snail-like shell, dog whelks are found on the lower shore wherever there are barnacles or mussels - their favourite food.
Once fed, dog whelks will rest in a crevice for a number of days before feeding again. Dog whelks avoid dense mussel beds as the mussels can trap the whelk using their sticky byssus threads. Nearly 30% of dog whelks trapped in this way die from slow starvation. Dog whelks lay their eggs in small yellowish capsules which can be spotted under rocky overhangs on the lower shore. Each capsule contains up to a thousand eggs - though most of these will become food for the few that hatch and develop.

How to identify

Dog whelks have a conical shell with a pointed spire. They predominantly have white shells in the UK, but may be brown or yellow. The dog whelk is smaller than the common whelk, smoother than the netted whelk and more rounded than the oyster drill. The animal itself is white or cream coloured but rarely seen.

Did you know?

The dog whelk feeds on mussels and barnacles by boring through their shells. It then injects enzymes to digest the prey within its shell, sucking the resulting 'liquid soup' out through its proboscis. It can take days to eat its prey this way.

How people can help

When rockpooling, be careful to leave everything as you found it - replace any rocks you turn over, put back any crabs or fish and ensure not to scrape anything off its rocky home.