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Bioecology and Management of Giant African Snail, Achatina Fulica (Bowdich)
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLANT PROTECTION e ISSN-0976-6855 | Visit us : www.researchjournal.co.in VOLUME 7 | ISSUE 2 | OCTOBER, 2014 | 476-481 IJPP A REVIEW DOI : 10.15740/HAS/IJPP/7.2/476-481 Bioecology and management of giant African snail, Achatina fulica (Bowdich) BADAL BHATTACHARYYA*1, MRINMOY DAS1, HIMANGSHU MISHRA1, D.J. NATH2 AND SUDHANSU BHAGAWATI1 1Department of Entomology, Assam Agricultural University, JORHAT (ASSAM) INDIA 2Department of Soil Science, Assam Agricultural University, JORHAT (ASSAM) INDIA ARITCLE INFO ABSTRACT Received : 30.06.2014 Giant African snail (Achatina fulica Bowdich) belongs to the Phylum–Mollusca and Class– Accepted : 21.09.2014 Gastropoda. It is known for its destructive nature on cultivated crops wherever it occurs and is one of the world’s largest and most damaging land snail pests. The pest is an East African origin, has spread in recent times by travel and trade to many countries. They now widely KEY WORDS : distributed and no longer limited to their region of origin due to several factors viz., high Bioecology, Management, Giant reproductive capacity, voracious feeding habit, inadequate quarantine management and human African snail, Achatina fulica aided dispersal. A. fulica can cause serious economic damage on different crops and extensive rasping (scrapping), defoliation, slime trials, or ribbon like excrement is signs of infestation. In recent times, severe outbreak of this pest has been noticed due to some desirable agricultural and gardening practices like minimum tillage practices and straw retention techniques which help in survival of snails and make seedlings more susceptible to damage. This review paper aims to enlighten on taxonomy, distribution, extent of damage, morphology, biology, ecology, homing behaviour, seasonal incidence, nature of damage, host plants of A. -
SPIRULA - Speciale Uitgave, Supplement Nr
SPIRULA - Speciale uitgave, supplement nr. 2 13 Eponiemen betreffende personen verbonden aan de NMV Gijs+C. Kronenberg Inleiding In het kader van het 50-jarig jubileum van de NMV werd een lijst gepubliceerd (KUIPER, 1984: 1589-1590) met In eponiemen, dat wil zeggen, weekdiersoortenvernoemd naar Nederlandse malacologen. latere jaren verschenen hierop een aantal aanvullingen (KUIPER, 1986; KUIPER, 1988; KUIPER, 1989; KUIPER, 1991; KUIPER, 1992; KUIPER, 1993; KUIPER 1995). Na 1995 zijn er verder geen overzichten meer samengesteld. Helaas is aan het initiatiefvan met KUIPER (opera cit.) geen vervolg gegeven, zodat we een achterstand zitten, maar die nu wordt weggewerkt middels deze vernieuwde lijst. Criteria perd door [KRONENBERG] (2001). Om in de lijst opgenomen te worden dientte worden voldaan Daarnaast hebben deze criteriaook als gevolg dat de namen aan drie criteria: Trochus wilsi PICKERY, 1989 (KUIPER 1992); Ischnochiton Men moet lid zijn (geweest) van de N.M.V. ofeen plaatselij- vanbellei KAAS; en Notoplax richardi KAAS [ook vernoemd ke schelpenwerkgroep enigszins geliëerd aan de NMV, of naar de heer R.A. VAN BELLE] (KUIPER, 1993) uitde lijst zijn daar in zeer nauwe (privé) relatie mee staan (huwelijk, geschrapt daar deze personen niet de Nederlandse nationali- dank samenwonen, kinderen) als voor de vele jaren trouwe teit (gehad) hebben, en taxa vernoemd naar Prof. Dr. J.K.L. Of in niet daar deze ondersteuning en dergelijke. men moet dusdanige pro- MARTIN opgenomen zijn niet de Nederlandse fessioneel malacologische relatie hebben gestaan dat de nationaliteitheeft gehad. auteur het taxon dat tot wilde in het Taxa beschreven door b.v. uit van uiting brengen ver- E.J. -
Taxonomic Note on Trichelix Horrida (Pfeiffer, 1863) from Laos, with a Type Catalogue of Moellendorffia, Trichelix, and Moellendorffiella (Heterobranchia, Camaenidae)
ZooKeys 952: 65–93 (2020) A peer-reviewed open-access journal doi: 10.3897/zookeys.952.52695 RESEARch ARTIclE https://zookeys.pensoft.net Launched to accelerate biodiversity research Taxonomic note on Trichelix horrida (Pfeiffer, 1863) from Laos, with a type catalogue of Moellendorffia, Trichelix, and Moellendorffiella (Heterobranchia, Camaenidae) Chirasak Sutcharit1, Khamla Inkhavilay2, Somsak Panha1 1 Animal Systematic Research Unit, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand 2 Department of Biology, Faculty of Natural Science, National University of Laos, P.O. Box 7322, Dongdok, Vientiane, Laos Corresponding author: Somsak Panha ([email protected]) Academic editor: F. Köhler | Received 29 March 2020 | Accepted 14 May 2020 | Published 23 July 2020 http://zoobank.org/9752C98C-0C8F-4BCC-974B-EEF6A47F0F59 Citation: Sutcharit C, Inkhavilay K, Panha S (2020) Taxonomic note on Trichelix horrida (Pfeiffer, 1863) from Laos, with a type catalogue of Moellendorffia, Trichelix, and Moellendorffiella (Heterobranchia, Camaenidae). ZooKeys 952: 65–93. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.952.52695 Abstract Land snail surveys conducted in northern Laos between 2013 and 2014 have led to the discovery of a liv- ing population of Trichelix horrida (Pfeiffer, 1863). This species has never been recorded from specimens other than the types, and its distribution and anatomy have remained essentially unknown. The genitalia and radula morphology are documented here for the first time and employed to re-assess the systematic position of this species: the unique morphological characters of T. horrida are a penis similar in length to the vagina, a small and triangular penial verge, gametolytic organs extending as far as the albumen gland, head wart present, and unicuspid triangular radula teeth. -
Achatina Fulica Background
Giant African Land Snail, Achatina fulica Background • Originally from coastal East Africa and its islands • Has spread to other parts of Africa, Asia, some Pacific islands, Australia, New Zealand, South America, the Caribbean, and the United States • Can be found in agricultural areas, natural forests, planted forests, riparian zones, wetlands, disturbed areas, and even urban areas in warm tropical climates with high humidity • Also known scientifically as Lissachatina fulica • Common names include giant African land snail and giant African snail Hosts Image citation: Cotton - Charles T. Bryson, USDA Agricultural Research Service, www.bugwood.org, #1116132 Banana - Charles T. Bryson, USDA Agricultural Research Service, www.bugwood.org, #1197011 Papaya - Forest & Kim Starr, Starr Environmental, www.bugwood.org, #5420178 Pumpkin - Howard F. Schwartz, Colorado State University, www.bugwood.org, #5365883 Cucumber - Howard F. Schwartz, Colorado State University, www.bugwood.org., #5363704 Carrots - M.E. Bartolo, www.bugwood.org, #5359190 Environmental Impacts • Consumes large quantities and numbers of species of native plants – May cause indirect damage to plants due to the sheer numbers of snails being so heavy that the plants beak under their weight – May also be a vector of several plant pathogens • Outcompetes and may even eat native snails • It eats so much it can alter the nutrient cycling • Their shells can neutralize acid soils and therefore damage plants that prefer acidic soils • Indirectly, the biocontrol and chemical control that is used on this species can affect native snail species as well. Structural Concerns and Nuisance Issues Image citation: Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry Public Health Concerns • Intermediate host that vectors: – rat lungworm, Angiostrongylus cantonensis (roundworm) – A. -
A Phylogeny of the Cannibal Snails of Southern Africa, Genus Natalina Sensu Lato (Pulmonata: Rhytididae): Assessing Concordance Between Morphology and Molecular Data
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 52 (2009) 167–182 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/ympev A phylogeny of the cannibal snails of southern Africa, genus Natalina sensu lato (Pulmonata: Rhytididae): Assessing concordance between morphology and molecular data Adnan Moussalli a,b,c,*, David G. Herbert a,b, Devi Stuart-Fox d a School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 3206, South Africa b Department of Mollusca, Natal Museum, P. Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South Africa c Sciences Department, Museum Victoria, Carlton, Vic. 3053, Australia d Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic. 3010, Australia article info abstract Article history: The genus Natalina Pilsbry, 1893 is a southern African endemic belonging to the Gondwanan family of Received 12 October 2008 carnivorous snails, Rhytididae. We present a well-resolved molecular phylogeny of the genus based on Revised 14 January 2009 the mitochondrial 16S and COI genes and the nuclear ITS2 gene, and assess this in light of Watson’s [Wat- Accepted 20 February 2009 son, H., 1934. Natalina and other South African snails. Proc. Malacol. Soc. Lond. 21, 150–193] supra-spe- Available online 1 March 2009 cific classification via a re-examination of 23 morphological characters including features of the shell, radula, external anatomy and distal reproductive tract. Ancestral reconstruction and character mapping Keywords: based on the MK model reveals broad concordance between morphology and the molecular phylogeny Natalina 1 at the supra-specific level. Given this concordance and exceptionally deep divergences in the molecular Rhytididae Mitochondrial data, we recommend the elevation of the subgenera Natalina s.s., Afrorhytida, and Capitina to generic sta- Nuclear tus. -
Zoologische Verhandelingen
Studies on the Streptaxidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda Pulmonata) of Malawˆi 8. A revision of ‘Marconia’ hamiltoni (Smith), the largest local streptaxid, with the description of a new genus1 A.C. van Bruggen & A.J. de Winter In memoriam Koos den Hartog Bruggen, A.C. van & A.J. de Winter. Studies on the Streptaxidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda Pulmonata) of Malawˆi 8. A revision of ‘Marconia’ hamiltoni (Smith), the largest local streptaxid, with the description of a new genus. Zool. Verh. Leiden 345, 31.x.2003: 59-78, figs 1-21, table 1.— ISSN 0024-0672, ISBN 90-73239-89-3. A.C. van Bruggen & A.J. de Winter, Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum, Postbus 9517, 2300 RA Lei- den, The Netherlands. Key words: Mollusca; Gastropoda; Pulmonata; Streptaxidae; Marconia; Austromarconia gen. nov.; taxonomy; nomenclature; Central Africa; Malawˆ i. ‘Marconia’ hamiltoni s.l. is known from two discrete mountainous areas in Malawˆ i, i.e. the (southern) Mt. Mulanje complex, and the (more northern) Zomba Plateau s.l. These uplands are separated by about 65 km of lower lying land with different types of vegetation and climate. Material from these two regions may be distinguished as separate species, the southern populations having comparatively small and broad shells with some apertural dentition (‘M’. hamiltoni, lectotype designated), while the northern populations have noticeably larger and more slender shells with a more reduced apertural dentition (‘M’. malavensis). Discussion of the type localities for both taxa shows that these are either localized in an unlikely place (‘M’. hamiltoni) or unclear (‘M’. malavensis). Radula and genital anatomy of ‘M’. hamiltoni are described and depicted for the first time. -
Occasional Papers
NUMBER 121, 11 pages 17 August 2017 BISHOP MUSEUM OCCASIONAL PAPERS FIRST RECORDS OF THE INVASIVE PREDATORY LAND SNAIL GULELLA (HUTTONELLA ) BICOLOR (H UTTON , 1834) (G ASTROPODA : STREPTAXIDAE ) FROM THE SOCIETY ISLANDS , FRENCH POLYNESIA CARL C. C HRISTENSEN & J ENNIFER G. K AHN BISHOP MUSEUM PRESS HONOLULU Cover image: Photo of site ScMo-350 in Haumi Bay, Mo'orea, Society Islands. Photo: J. Kahn. Bishop Museum Press has been publishing scholarly books on the natu - ESEARCH ral and cultural history of Hawai‘i and the Pacific since 1892. The R Bishop Museum Occasional Papers (eISSN 2376-3191) is a series of short papers describing original research in the natural and cultural sci - PUBLICATIONS OF ences. BISHOP MUSEUM The Bishop Museum Press also publishes the Bishop Museum Bulletin series. It was begun in 1922 as a series of monographs presenting the results of research throughout the Pacific in many scientific fields. In 1987, the Bulletin series was separated into the Museum’s five current monographic series, issued irregularly and, since 2017, electronically: Bishop Museum Bulletins in Anthropology (eISSN 2376-3132) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Botany (eISSN 2376-3078) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Entomology (eISSN 2376-3124) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Zoology (eISSN 2376-3213) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Cultural and Environmental Studies (eISSN 2376-3159) To subscribe to any of the above series, or to purchase individual publi - cations, please write to: Bishop Museum Press, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-2704, USA. Phone: (808) 848-4135. Email: [email protected]. BERNICE PAUAHI BISHOP MUSEUM ISSN 0893-1348 (print) The State Museum of Natural and Cultural History ISSN 2376-3191 (online) 1525 Bernice Street Copyright © by Bishop Museum Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-2704, USA Published online: 17 August 2017 ISSN (online): 2376-3191 First Records of the Invasive Predatory Land Snail Gulella (Huttonella) bicolor (Hutton, 1834) (Gastropoda: Streptaxidae) from the Society Islands, French Polynesia . -
ZM82 615-650 Robinson.Indd
The land Mollusca of Dominica (Lesser Antilles), with notes on some enigmatic or rare species D.G. Robinson, A. Hovestadt, A. Fields & A.S.H. Breure Robinson, D.G., A. Hovestadt, A. Fields & A.S.H. Breure. The land Mollusca of Dominica, Lesser Antilles, with notes on some enigmatic or rare species. Zool. Med. Leiden 83 (13), 9.vii.2009: 615-650, fi gs 1-14, tables 1-2.― ISSN 0024-0672. D.G. Robinson, The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, U.S.A. ([email protected]). A. Hovestadt, Dr. Abraham Kuyperlaan 22, NL-3818 JC Amersfoort, The Netherlands (ad.hovestadt@ xs4all.nl). A. Fields, Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Cam- pus, Barbados (angela.fi [email protected]). A.S.H. Breure, National Museum of Natural History, P.O. Box 9517, NL-2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands ([email protected]). Key words: Mollusca, Gastropoda, taxonomy, distribution, Dominica. An overview of the land-snail fauna of the Lesser Antillean island of Dominica is given, based on data from literature and four recent surveys. There are 42 taxa listed, of which the following species are recorded for the fi rst time from the island: Allopeas gracile (Hutt on, 1834), A. micra (d’Orbigny, 1835), Beckianum beckianum (L. Pfeiff er, 1846), Bulimulus diaphanus fraterculus (Potiez & Michaud, 1835), De- roceras laeve (Müller, 1774), Sarasinula marginata (Semper, 1885), Streptostele musaecola (Morelet, 1860) and Veronicella sloanii (Cuvier, 1817). The enigmatic Bulimulus stenogyroides Guppy, 1868 is now placed in the genus Naesiotus Albers, 1850. -
Madagascar's Biogeographically Most Informative Land-Snail Taxa
Biogéographie de Madagascar,1996 :563-574 MADAGASCAR'S BIOGEOGRAPELICALLY MOST INFORMATIVE LAND- SNAIL TAXA Kenneth C. EMBERTON & Max F. RAKOTOMALALA Molluscar? Biodiversiiy Institute, 216-A Haddon Hills, Haddon$eld,NJ 08033, U.S.A. Departementd'Entomologie, Parc Botanique et Zoologiquede Tsimbazaza, Antananarivo 101, MADAGASCAR ABSTRACT.-Madagascar's known native land-snail faunais currently classifiedinto 540 species(97% endemic) in 68 genera (29% endemic)in 25 families (0% endemic). Recent survey work throughout the island may as much as double this number of species and should provide, for the first time, adequate material and distributional data for robust cladistic and biogeographic analyses. Preliminary analysisof existing cladograms and range maps suggestsareas of endenlism with recurrent patterns of vicariance. Which of the many Madagascan taxa will yieldthe most biogeographic information perunit of effort? Based on the criteria of species number, nzonophyly, vagility, character accessibility, and Gondwanan areas of endemism, the best candidates are (a) acavoids (giant, k-selected, (( bird's-egg snails D), (b) Boucardicus (minute, top-shaped shells with flamboyant apertures), (c) charopids (minute, discoid shells with complex microsculptures), and (d) streptaxids (small-to-medium-sized, white-shelled, high-spired carnivores). KEY-W0RDS.- Land-snail, Madagascar, Informative, Biogeography RESUME.- La faune connueà l'heure actuelle des escargots terrestres de Madagascar peut être classée dans 540 espèces (97% endémiques), 68 genres (29% endémiques) et 25 familles(0% endémiques). Un récent travail d'inventaire réalisé dans l'ensemble l'îlede pourra amener à doubler le nombre d'espèces et devra fournir pour la première fois un matériel et des données adéquates sur la distribution des espèces permettant des analyses cladistiques et biogéographiques robustes. -
19 Wêèèëèèëêêêèt WK8ÊÊÊÊÊKÈÊÊÊSÊÈÈÈÈ
19 WÊÈÈËÈÈËÊÊÊÈt SPIRULA - nr. 330 (2003) WK8ÊÊÊÊÊKÈÊÊÊSÊÈÈÈÈ Artikelen in tijdschriften (Journal papers: continental malacology) R.A. Bank Sorted the order Malacologicalpapers published in journals. in following of succession: Faunistics/Ecology - Fossil Assemblages - Bivalvia - Gastropoda (alphabetically rubricated at the - - family level) Miscellanea Publications in the Bulletin ofZoological Nomenclature (new cases - - Within each item, ordered the comments onprevious cases Opinions). papers are alphabetically on name of the first author. FAUNISTICS/ECOLOGY 39: 131-134. Mainz. rischen Wald zum Schwaimberg bei Graf- und in die Leite bei Fre- • Gerlach, J. & O. Griffiths (2002): The land enau Buchberger • Bank, K. - In: M. Falkner, K. Groh & M.C.D. R.A., Groh & Th.E.J. Ripken snails of the Aldabra Islands, western yung. Speight (eds.), Collectanea Malacologica. (2002): Catalogue and bibliography of the Indian Ocean. - Journal of Conchology, Festschrift für Gerhard Falkner. Hacken- non-marine Mollusca of Macaronesia. - 37 (6): 667-679. London. M. heim/München (ConchBooks/Friedrich- In: Falkner, K. Groh & M.C.D. Speight • Girardi, H. (2002): Notes sur la présence 47. (eds.), Collectanea Malacologica. Fest- Held-Gesellschaft): 525-530,pl. de mollusquesdulfaquicoles en Camargue • schrift für Gerhard Falkner. Hacken- Pilate, D. & C. Greke (2002): Die Mollus- (Bouches-du-Rhöne, France) (Mollusca: heim/München (ConchBooks/Friedrich- ken des Slitere-Nationalparks und angren- Gastropoda et Bivalvia). - Documents Held-Gesellschaft): 14-26. zender Gebiete - 89-235, pl. Malacologiques,3: 3-8. Boussenac. (Nordwest-Lettland). MalakologischeAbhandlungen Staatliches • Glöer, P. (2002): Die Molluskenfauna der Museum für Tierkunde Dresden, 20 (2, Elbe bei Hamburg und angrenzender 30): 283-293. Dresden. Gewüsser vor 100 Jahren und heute. Ein • Prié, V. -
Gastropoda) of the Islands of Sao Tome and Principe, with New Records and Descriptions of New Taxa
This is the submitted version of the article: “Holyoak, D.T., Holyoak, G.A., Lima, R.F. de, Panisi, M. and Sinclair, F. 2020. A checklist of the land Mollusca (Gastropoda) of the islands of Sao Tome and Principe, with new records and descriptions of new taxa. Iberus, 38 (2): 219-319.” This version has not been peer-reviewed and is only being shared to comply with funder requirements. Please do not use it in any form and contact the authors (e.g.: [email protected]) to get access to the accepted version of the article. 1 New species and genera and new island records of land snails (Gastropoda) from the islands of São Tomé and Príncipe Nueva especies de .... David T. HOLYOAK1, Geraldine A. HOLYOAK1, Ricardo F. de LIMA2,3, Martina PANISI2 and Frazer SINCLAIR3,4 Recibidio el ... ABSTRACT Seven species of terrestrial Gastropoda are newly described from the island of São Tomé and six more from the island of Príncipe. The genera involved are Chondrocyclus (Cyclophoridae), Maizania and Thomeomaizania (Maizaniidae), Pseudoveronicella (Veronicellidae), Nothapalus (Achatinidae: subfamily undet.), Gulella and Streptostele (Streptaxidae), Truncatellina (Truncatellinidae), Afroconulus (Euconulidae), Principicochlea gen. nov., Principotrochoidea gen. nov., Thomithapsia gen. nov. and Thomitrochoidea gen. nov. (Urocyclidae). Most of these are from natural forest habitats and are likely to be single- island endemics. Apothapsia gen. nov. (Helicarionidae) is also described to accommodate two previously known species. Additional new island records are of ten species on São Tomé, one on Príncipe alone and two more on both islands. These include six species of "microgastropods" with wider ranges in tropical Africa that are likely to be hitherto overlooked parts of the indigenous fauna and six anthropogenic introductions; Pseudopeas crossei previously known only from Príncipe and Bioko is newly recorded on São Tomé. -
Mollusca (Geograpliische Verbreitung', Systematik Und Biologie) Für 1896-1000
© Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zobodat.at Mollusca (geograpliische Verbreitung', Systematik und Biologie) für 1896-1000. Von Dr. \V. Kobelt. Verzeichniss der Publikationen, a) Jahrgang 1896. Adams, L. C. Interesting Kentish Forms. — In: J. Conch. Leeds vol. 8 p. 316—320. Aiicey, C. F. Descriptions of some new shells from the New Hebrides Archipelago. — In: Nautilus, vol. 10 p. 90 — 91. Andre, E. MoUusques d'Amboine. — In: Rev. Suisse Zool. vol. 4 p. 394—405. Baker, F. C. Preliminary Outline of a new Classification of the family Mtiricidae. — In: Bull. Chicago Ac. vol. 2 (1895) p. 109 —169. Baldwiu, D. D. Description of two new species AchatinelUdae from the Hawaiian Islands. — In: Nautilus, vol. 10 p. 31 —32. Beddome, C. E. Note on Cypraea angustata Gray, var. sub- carnea Ancey. — In: P. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales vol. 21 p. 467—468. Benoist, E. Sur les Unio de la Gironde, et les especes pouvant fournir des perles. — In: Comptes Rendus Soc. Bordeaux 1896 p. 62—64. Bergli, R. Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Coniden. — In: Acta Ac. Leopold. Carol. v. 65 p. 67—214, mit 13 Taf. — (2). Beitrag zur Kenntniss der Gattungen Nanca und Onvstus. — In: Verh. zool.. -bot. Ges. Wien, v. 46 p. 212. Mit 2 Taf. — (3). Ueber die Gattung Doriopsüla. — In: Zool. Jahrb. Syst. V. 9 p. 454—458. — (4). Eolidiens d'Amboina. — In: Revue Suisse Zool. v. 4 p. 385—394. Avec pl. Blazka, F. Die Molluskenfauna der Elbe-Tümpel. — In: Zool. Anz. V. 19 p. 301— 307. © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zobodat.at 11-2 Dr.