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St Anthony's Wilderness, State Game Lands 211
Ken Hotopp
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Land
snails are mollusks found on all continents and they occur
virtually everywhere in Eastern North America, where there
are more than 500 native species. They live primarily in the
upper leaf litter of forests, old fields, and wetlands, but
also in more disturbed habitats such as active gardens and
fields, river banks, suburbs, and even cities. The term “land
snails” includes snails and slugs, which have no obvious
shell.
These terrestrial
mollusks feed upon a wide variety of organic material, mainly
green or dead herbaceous plants, rotting wood and fungi, bark
and algae, but they also consume empty snail shells, sap,
animal scats and carcasses, and even rasp limestone rock or
cement. Carnivorous snail species attack nematodes and other
snails.
Land snails in turn are eaten by a variety of invertebrate and vertebrate predators. Predators include invertebrates such as parasitic mites, nematodes and flies; beetle larvae, beetles and millipedes; and other snails. Cychrine beetles have specialized bodies for preying upon land snails. Fireflies are a well-known insect whose larvae consume snails. Vertebrate predators of snails and slugs include herptiles such as salamanders and turtles; shrews, mice and other small mammals; and birds, especially ground-foragers such as thrushes, grouse, and turkey.
With regard to
ecosystem function, shelled land snails (as opposed to slugs)
are important in calcium cycling. They glean calcium from
their food, concentrate it in their shells that are made mainly
from calcium carbonate, and pass it up the food chain as they
are consumed by Predators. Both shelled snails
and slugs can generally be categorized as decomposers, though
they play only a small role compared to other decomposition
organisms.
Land snails do
not move far over their lifetime, so they can be excellent
indicators of site history and site conditions. Because shelled
land snails have a high calcium demand, they are sensitive
to calcium availability due to soils and plants. Site moisture
and past land clearing or fire also strongly influence snail
populations. Land snails have been used extensively in European
archaeology to interpret environments of the distant past.
They can also be indicators of pollution, as they uptake environmental
toxins such as cadmium.
Human
use of land snails as food ranges from Native American consumption
of Oreohelix species snails in the western states,
to fine dining upon Helix species snails served as
escargot in restaurants. Medical uses include the production
of an anti-agglutinin from the albumin glands of Helix
aspersa.
Land snails
can also have negative interactions with other organisms.
Snails are intermediate hosts to a variety of mammalian parasites.
The cervid brainworm Parelaphostrongylus tenuis is
carried by deer and can severely limit moose and caribou populations.
But the most serious ecosystem and agricultural impacts due
to land snails are often related to non-native pest populations.
For example, the introduced European white garden snail Theba
pisana that can damage ornamental and citrus plants has
been the subject of eradication programs in California. And
virtually every Pennsylvania gardener knows the problems that
introduced arionid slugs can cause.
Further importation
of non-native land snails as pets or as “biological
control” agents has the potential to create major agricultural
and ecosystem impacts. The Giant African Snail is one popular
pet, which – although it is illegal to import to the United
States – is being sold by poorly-regulated, ignorant,
or unscrupulous dealers and then released into the wild by
unknowing owners.
Ken Hotopp 10/22/05
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