Some well known gastropods, which are mollusks, are snails and slugs, and they exhibit what is known as BILATERAL SYMMETRY. The only other kind of symmetry that exists in the animal kingdom, with the exception of colonial species such as the sponge, is RADIAL SYMMETRY. This second type is exhibited by starfish, for example. Cephalopods, another type of mollusk, may appear to be radially symmetric, but are actually bilaterally symmetric due to the composition of their cephalic (head) region.
Snaials are not mammals! They are a type of invertabrate!
Snails are in the class Gastropoda.
Lateral Symmetry.
Bilateral symmetry
bilateral symmetry
Radial Symmetry
Bilateral Symmetry
turn symmetry
Bilateral symmetry.
The only mollusks that are Gastropoda are slugs and snails.
Bilateral symmetry. All humans have bilateral symmetry.
Radial symmetry