With filamentous gills '' respires using a
gill which is visible in this view of the right side of the animal In gastropods in many ancient lineages, the
gills are
bipectinate, having an overall shape that is similar to a bird's
feather, with narrow filaments projecting either side of a central stalk. Gastropods such as
abalone and
keyhole limpets have two gills, which is believed to be the arrangement in the earliest fossil gastropods. The water current to supply these gills is evacuated through a slit or notch in the upper surface of the shell, below which the anus opens. In most other gastropods, the right gill has been lost. In groups such as the
turban shells the gill still retains its primitive bipectinate form, and in these animals, the water current is oblique, entering the mantle cavity on the left side of the head, flowing over the gill, and then being flushed out on the right side. The anus is also on the right side of the body, so that waste matter is efficiently carried away. Bipectinate gills have to be supported by membranes, and these can become fouled with debris and sediment, restricting such gastropods to relatively clean-water environments, such as water flowing over solid rock. In living gastropods, a
unipectinate arrangement is more common, allowing species to invade muddy or sandy environments. This type of gill is firmly anchored to the mantle wall along its length, with a single row of filaments projecting down into the water stream. Unipectinate gills are found in a wide range of snails, including marine, freshwater, and even terrestrial forms. Examples include
periwinkles,
conches, and
whelks. The water current is oblique, as it is in the turban shells, but many have developed a
siphon formed from the rolled-up margin of the
mantle. The siphon sucks in water to the mantle cavity, and may be long enough to extend through the substrate in burrowing species. In one amphibious group, the
Ampullariidae, the mantle cavity is divided into two, with a unipectinate gill on one side, and a lung on the other, so that these snails can respire using air or water. ''. Arrows are pointing to the pallial tentacles for breathing.
Other gill arrangements Chromodoris joshi has a rosette of gills far back on the body. Nudibranch means "naked gills". Near the front of the animal are the two
rhinophores. In many gastropods, the filamentous gill has been replaced by a "plicate", or folded, structure. Many of these gastropods have also undergone
detorsion, such that the mantle cavity and gill have shifted round to the right side of the body. This type of arrangement is found in the
bubble shells and also in the
sea hares, which also possess an exhalant siphon which sends fouled water away from the body. In some
nudibranchs, the mantle cavity and the original gill have disappeared altogether. Instead, the upper surface of the body has numerous club-shaped or branched projections called
cerata that function as secondary gills. Secondary gills are also present in the unrelated genus
Patella, in which they are found as folds within the mantle cavity. Some smaller gastropods have neither true gills nor cerata. The genus
Lepeta uses the whole of the mantle cavity as a respiratory surface, while many
sea butterflies respire through their general body surface. ==Terrestrial gastropods==