Eyestalk

In anatomy, an eyestalk (sometimes spelled eye stalk and also known as an ommatophore) is a protrusion that extends the eye away from the body, giving the eye a better field of view.[1] It is a common feature in nature and frequently appears in fiction.

Pulmonate land snails usually have two sets of tentacles on their head: the upper pair have an eye at the end; the lower pair are for olfaction.[1]

In nature

Eyestalks are a specialized type of tentacle. Tentacles may also have olfactory organs at their ends.[2] Examples of creatures with olfactory tentacles include snails, the trilobite superfamily Asaphida, and the fly family Diopsidae. In slugs and snails, these tentacles will regrow if severely damaged, and in some species, are retractable.[1]

gollark: I can't not neither unconfirm nor antideny the non-use of no memetics which might or might not be more powerful or less powerful or equally powerful compared to the lesser memetics which are potentially in use by some entities who may or may not exist.
gollark: You just never interact with human civilization?
gollark: As planned.
gollark: Not strictly *all*-powerful, but mostly.
gollark: GTech™ has never been at war.

See also

References

  1. "Slug and Snail Anatomy". All About Slugs. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  2. "Snails and Slugs (Gastropoda) – The Tentacles of Snails". The Living World of Molluscs. Retrieved 8 December 2015.

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