The aims of this study were to analyse whether land snail assemblage patterns reflect the gradient of calcium content on a very small scale within a site. We chose two sites differing in their calcium richness and source of the calcium. The “Tufa site” had abundant tufa in the soil, while the “Boulder site” was on chemically inert chert bedrock where calcium originated from vegetation. On each site a set of 20 quadrats from which snails were extracted was laid down in a line from the calcium rich patch to the calcium poorer surround matrix. At the both sites, available calcium contents of topsoil decreased significantly with samples' position from the patch centre. For the Tufa site, calcium content was a strong controller not only of species composition but also species richness, total abundance, and abundances of almost all species. At the Boulder site only species composition was significantly driven by calcium. Species composition was highly nested along calcium gradient at the Tufa site contrary to the Boulder site where the species had an almost random distribution. We conclude that the best predictor of species composition was in both cases content of carbonate calcium in topsoil. Topsoil pH was positively correlated with calcium content only at the Tufa site.