Snails have bilateral symmetry.
The snail's body itself is bilateral symmetry. The shell it creates is not.A snail has bilateral symmetry but its shell has radial symmetry.PS. It is radial not radical.
Some mollusks have bilateral symmetry. Mollusks include gastropods such as snails, bivalves such as oysters, and cephalopods such as squid. Some bivalves have bilateral symmetry.
Most animals in the Mollusk phylum have bilateral symmetry, where their body can be divided into two equal halves along a single plane. This symmetry allows for more efficient movement and sensory abilities.
Believe it or not Mollusks start out with bilateral symmetry. Some retain it such as slugs, snails, squid, octopuses, and limpets. Then there are others that lose it as they mature such as oysters, clams, scallops, etc.
They both have a true coelom and bilateral symmetry.
Bilateral, meaning left and right are equal.
Snails' bodies have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side. Their shell, on the other hand, tends to be radial symmetry.
snails have shells slugs don't it is obvious
Snails dont rebuild their shells. I used to think that slugs were just snails without shells, but without their shells, snails die. Their bodies are sort of connected to the shells.
They grow them.
Their shells?