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Date: | Wed, 10 Feb 1999 12:19:51 +1000 |
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On Wednesday, February 10, 1999 at 12:43:39 pm VUT,
"Alan Gettleman" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>When I was thirteen, my family brought back a live Euglandina from
>Florida to our home in the midwest, and since we found it on the banks
>of a lake, and since we were shell collectors and knew ALL shells lived
>in water, we tossed the snail into our freshwater aquarium.
There's an interesting paper about this snail feeding on native aquatic
snails in Hawaii. The full reference is:
Kinzie,RA (1992): Predation by the introduced carnivorous snail Euglandina
rosea (Ferussac) on endemic aquatic lymnaeid snails in Hawaii. Biological
Conservation 60: 149-155.
In it Kinzie describes how Euglandina sits on the bank and sticks its head
underwater to track mucus trails from aquatic snails (lymnaeids). Seems that
nothing is safe from this predator (except Achatina, of course, the very
think it was meant to control).
Bronwen
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Dr Bronwen Scott School of Life Sciences
Lecturer, Invertebrate Biology Victoria University of Technology
St Albans Campus - S008
Phone: +61 3 9365 2443 P.O. Box 14428
Fax: +61 3 9365 2465 Melbourne MC
Victoria 8001, Australia
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