
Whelk eggs, all of them hatched, from the strandline on Druridge Bay, Northumberland last Monday.
Richard Bell's nature sketchbook since 1998

Whelk eggs, all of them hatched, from the strandline on Druridge Bay, Northumberland last Monday.

Whelks gather together for a mass spawning, so each of these egg cases was added by a different individual. Each case can contain 1,000 eggs but the first few to hatch will feed on the remaining eggs.

I photographed this egg mass on the beach at Druridge Bay and used a handy feature of Procreate, a reference image panel, when I drew it using Procreate’s ‘Technical Pen’.

On the top left you can see the whelk’s siphonal canal. When it is hunting, the whelk’s siphon tube protrudes from this groove and swings from side to side as locates its prey using scent receptors.
Whelks produce a ‘purpurin’, a purple dye which is thought to immobilise their prey.
Keel worm cases encrust the exterior and some of the smooth interior of the shell.