By

Megan Gannon /

Livescience.com/ August 22, 2012, 2:31 PM

Tiny exotic snail is colonizing Earth

This is the mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum, next to a pencil head for scale.

This is the mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum, next to a pencil head for scale. / LiveScience.com

(LiveScience) The New Zealand mudsnail is tiny, about the size of a pencil point, but it is colonizing the planet. The snail has spread far from its home, throughout rivers, lakes and streams in Europe, Australia, Asia and America. In the United States, where it has no natural predators or parasites, it outcompetes native snails and insects for food and is considered an invasive species.

What makes this mudsnail, Potamopyrgus antipodarum, such a good invader? The answer lies partly in the species' ability to reproduce quickly and amass in high densities. (Females can produce offspring -- up to 230 per year -- without males.) Now, research has found the New Zealand mudsnail can also survive without water for up to two days, meaning it could latch on to birds, fishing tools or land animals to hitch a ride to a new home.

Spanish researchers ?lvaro Alonso and Pilar Castro-D?ez from the University of Alcal? exposed the snails to different dehydration periods in lab experiments to see how long most survived. Even after 48 hours in dry conditions, the snails would still spring back to life when put back in water, the researchers reported in a paper published Aug. 20 in the journal NeoBiota

With this information, the scientists recommended some tactics to prevent the spread of mudsnails. First, they wrote that fishing tools and other instruments should be given a drying treatment (namely, exposing them to air for at least 50 hours) if they are going to be used in different aquatic ecosystems repeatedly.

Second, the researchers recommend using physical barriers or other mechanisms (such as scarecrows for waterfowl) to keep wild and domestic animals from accessing infected waters.

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hypnotoad72 says:
And if you think fishermen are going to care...

Americans are too lazy to take off weeds that might contain critters that will happily sit there until they find a new lake to breed in... fishermen in other countries are more like to go whaling regardless of what eeeeeeeeeeevil regulations they're told to do...
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hypnotoad72 says:
But, *sniff*, competition is a good thing!

Until those snails drive out everyone else's profits...
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karek40 says:
And why has it taken 14.5 billion years for this colonizing to begin to occur? Suspicious!
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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Nonsense. God merely waved His magic wand and voila... the snail merely took 600 centuries...
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Henri_Rochard says:
We'd better get used to the mudsnail. It's gonna be freakin' EVERYWHERE.
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