2018
DOI: 10.1080/13235818.2018.1423866
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Consequences of invasion byPseudosuccinea columellaon the dynamics of native lymnaeids living on the acid soils of central France

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Cited by 4 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Pseudosuccinea columella is thought to have originated from Central America, the Caribbean and the southern part of North America (Mas-Coma et al, 2005), and this review has shown that this species has been successfully introduced and established in other continents with varying environmental and ecological conditions. The results from this review showed that in addition to its native regions (Dar et al, 2014;Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018;Vignoles et al, 2018;Carolus et al, 2019), P. columella has been documented in Africa, Europe, South America (Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018) and Oceania (Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018;Vignoles et al, 2018;Alba et al, 2019b). The results further indicate that from these four newly invaded continents, this invasive freshwater snail has been reported in 19 countries, but is now well established and widely distributed in Africa and South America, and is least distributed in Oceania (Lounnas et al, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…Pseudosuccinea columella is thought to have originated from Central America, the Caribbean and the southern part of North America (Mas-Coma et al, 2005), and this review has shown that this species has been successfully introduced and established in other continents with varying environmental and ecological conditions. The results from this review showed that in addition to its native regions (Dar et al, 2014;Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018;Vignoles et al, 2018;Carolus et al, 2019), P. columella has been documented in Africa, Europe, South America (Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018) and Oceania (Martin et al, 2016;Lounnas et al, 2017;Alba et al, 2018;Vignoles et al, 2018;Alba et al, 2019b). The results further indicate that from these four newly invaded continents, this invasive freshwater snail has been reported in 19 countries, but is now well established and widely distributed in Africa and South America, and is least distributed in Oceania (Lounnas et al, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Although an inspection of the frequency of habitats in reviewed studies showed that P. columella is commonly found on riverbanks, the results also showed that P. columella thrives in diverse freshwater habitats ranging from man-made, to natural, temporal and permanent habitats. In addition to freshwater habitats, this lymnaeid species has been found in ditches of acid soils that have water with low levels of calcium (Vignoles et al, 2018) and areas with low salinity (Perissinotto et al, 2014). Furthermore, it has been documented to occur in places with high altitudes and low temperatures (Bardales-Valdivia et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hosts can lose their native parasites, establishing their invasive range [116]. However, the imported molluscs can generate significant epidemiological risk [43,134,135].…”
Section: Human-mediated Distribution Of Epidemiological Risk Of Snailsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given its widespread invasion in Europe, G. chinensis may pose an existing and/or potential threat to snails of the same genus and family, which include endangered species (IUCN, 2022). In other representatives of Hygrophila, negative impacts on other native species of the same family (Lymnaeidae; Pseudosuccinea columella (Say, 1817); Vignoles et al, 2018) and the potential for introgressive hybridisation with closely related species have been reported (e.g. Ferrissia californica (Rowell, 1863); Saito et al, 2018a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%