| TEREDO | Ed tore out for a mollusc (6) |
| ROOTBEER | Boer tore out for a drink (4,4) |
| OYSTER | A new storey built for a mollusc (6) |
| LIMPET | Allow rascal in for a mollusc (6) |
| COCKLE | From the French for "shell", a mollusc with heart-shaped shucks; black tourmaline; a furnace, oast or stove; a little boat; or, a codename for a kayak in the Second World War (6) |
| VORTEX | Eddy tore out between five and ten (6) |
| EDITOR | I correct or delete cutting I tore out (6) |
| MANTLE | Word for a cloak or shawl, hence a blanket, coating of snow, layer of the Earth, pallium of a mollusc, tapestry, wing covert of a bird or other covering/concealing thing (6) |
| RIBBON | A taenia of satin or silk etc with which to make a cockade, fillet or rosette; or, something strip-like, such as a band-saw or a mollusc's radula (6) |
| SQUID | A shilling and a pound for a mollusc (5) |
| TURRETSHELL | Tower's a terrible place for a mollusc |
| RAZORSHELL | Reportedly whip up a storm at first - awful for a mollusc! |
| PURPLE | Colour whose name derives from a mollusc yielding a crimson dye (6) |
| PIPE | High pitched sound is first for a mollusc |
| MUSSEL | A mollusc |
| ROTIFER | Tore out the fir for a bit of plankton (7) |
| RASP | A grating sound; a scrape of a door; a coarse file; a mollusc's tongue; or, a berry synonymous with a boo (4) |
| ASPEN | The page Sean tore out shows a tree (5) |
| TOWELRAIL | Wall I tore out to make place for drier (5-4) |
| SURROGATE | Tore out to get a new sugar substitute (9) |