From the deep seas of southern Australia, a previously unknown fauna has started to emerge. In recent publications, Australian Museum Research Associates Dr Anders Hallan and Dr Francesco Criscione name a plethora of venomous deep-sea snails.

Roaming the deep ocean off our southern coastlines are venomous, carnivorous snails of the superfamily Conoidea. Not your usual suspects, these are innocuous-looking, shell-bearing creatures superficially masquerading as any other sea snail. That is, until you examine the animals inside – a considerable part of their anatomy is, in most species, dedicated to housing a large, complex venom apparatus. It is this anatomical feature that makes this extremely diverse group so unique among molluscs.

Over the past four years, our knowledge of Australian deep-sea conoideans has improved considerably. Collaborating with researchers in Europe, we have pieced together a large and almost entirely unknown fauna of the ‘turrids’, a large family conglomerate that together with the Conidae (cone snails) and Terebridae (auger snails) comprise this fascinating superfamily.

Of the ‘turrids’, we have named twelve new genera of the family Raphitomidae, with nearly fifty new species already described or in press. Other groups under our microscope during this collaboration include the rare Bouchetispiridae, Cochlespiridae, and the namesake family Turridae, where all ‘turrids’ were previously placed. Why the quotes, you ask? This is to allow the distinction between the true Turridae from this large informal grouping.


Diverse gastropods: assortment of Australian deep-sea ‘turrids’.

Diverse gastropods: assortment of Australian deep-sea ‘turrids’.

Image: Anders Hallan and Francesco Criscione
© Australian Museum

These animals can travel far – through a combination of molecular and morphological data we have discovered that some species are cosmopolitan, occurring in all of the world’s major oceans. In the deep, temperature and salinity are relatively constant from the poles to the tropics. Combined with few bathymetric barriers to separate populations, the potential for gene flow is significant.

Many of the species we have studied are extremely rare, with some even known from a single specimen. In the abyss, the increased dissolution of calcium carbonate – the building blocks of all mollusc shells – translates into thin, fragile and often eroded shells with few characteristic features, at times making identification extremely difficult. In combination with wide distributions, these factors make deep-sea 'turrids' a very challenging, yet highly important group to study. Commonly dominant in the deep sea in terms of species richness, and loaded with pharmacologically important venoms, an understanding of their biodiversity, distribution, and evolutionary relationships is crucial.


Hypodermic teeth of new deep-sea ‘turrid’ species. The venom is channelled through the tooth and injected through the sharp tip, initiated by a powerful contraction of a muscle in the snails’ venom apparatus.

Hypodermic teeth of new deep-sea ‘turrid’ species. The venom is channelled through the tooth and injected through the sharp tip, initiated by a powerful contraction of a muscle in the snails’ venom apparatus.

Image: SEM images by Anders Hallan & Francesco Criscione
© Australian Museum

This project would not have been possible without the support of the Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS) and the prolific deep-sea exploration and sampling in recent years aboard the Research Vessel Investigator. As the samples have steadily resurfaced, our knowledge of this mysterious fauna has deepened. Through intensive study of multiple genes, careful examination of hypodermic teeth, venom anatomy, shell morphology and biogeography, we are now starting to appreciate the nature and diversity of deep-sea ‘turrids’ in Australia.


Dr Anders Hallan, Research Associate, Malacology, Australian Museum Research Institute.

Dr Francesco Criscione, Research Associate, Malacology, Australian Museum Research Institute.


More information:

  • Criscione, F., Hallan, A., Fedosov, A., & Puillandre, N. 2021. Deep Downunder: Integrative taxonomy of Austrobela, Spergo, Theta and Austrotheta (Gastropoda: Conoidea: Raphitomidae) from the deep sea of Australia. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 00, 1–36. https://doi.org/10.1111/jzs.12512
  • Criscione, F., Hallan, A., Puillandre, N., & Fedosov, A. E. 2020. Where the snails have no name: a molecular phylogeny of Raphitomidae (Neogastropoda: Conoidea) uncovers vast unexplored diversity in the deep seas of temperate southern and eastern Australia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 191 (4), 961–1000. DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa088.
  • Hallan, A., Criscione, F., Fedosov, A. & Puillandre, N. 2021. Few and far apart: integrative taxonomy of Australian species of Gladiobela and Pagodibela (Conoidea : Raphitomidae) reveals patterns of wide distributions and low abundance. Invertebrate Systematics. 35(2): 181–202. DOI: 10.1071/is20017.
  • Hallan, A., Criscione, F., Fedosov, A. E. & Puillandre, N. 2020. Bouchetispira ponderi n. sp. (Conoidea: Bouchetispiridae), a new deep-sea gastropod from temperate Australia. Molluscan Research, 40:1, 86-92. DOI: 10.1080/13235818.2019.1681626.
  • Zaharias, P., Kantor, Y. I., Fedosov, A. E., Criscione, F., Hallan, A., Kano, Y., Bardin, J., & Puillandre, N. 2020. Just the once will not hurt: DNA suggests species lumping over two oceans in deep-sea snails (Cryptogemma). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 190(2), 532–557. DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa010.