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Article

The Rapid Expansion of the Jumping Snail Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil

by
Rafael Masson Rosa
1,*,
Rodrigo Brincalepe Salvador
2,
Larissa Teixeira
3,
Marcos Ricardo Bornschein
3 and
Daniel Caracanhas Cavallari
1
1
Departamento de Biologia, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto 14040-900, São Paulo, Brazil
2
Natural History Department, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington 6011, New Zealand
3
Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Estadual Paulista—Campus do Litoral Paulista, São Vicente 11330-900, São Paulo, Brazil
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Diversity 2022, 14(10), 815; https://doi.org/10.3390/d14100815
Submission received: 12 September 2022 / Revised: 21 September 2022 / Accepted: 27 September 2022 / Published: 29 September 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Continental Mollusca under Global Change)

Abstract

:
The exotic Japanese jumping snail, Ovachlamys fulgens, was first recorded in Santa Catarina state, Brazil, in 2013. Based on data gathered from the literature, natural history collections, field samplings, and the iNaturalist platform, we assess its current distribution in the country. Our data show that the jumping snail has had a dramatic range expansion since its introduction, reaching six other states from the southern region of the country toward the Midwest. The affected locations are mostly urban but also include three biological reserves and protected areas, and possibly more. We discuss the consequences of this rapid invasion, its means of introduction, its local ecology, and prospects for monitoring and control.

1. Introduction

Because of human activity worldwide, the number of species introduced to areas outside their native ranges continues to increase. While exotic species are not always detrimental to their new habitats, they can often become invasive and cause severe damage to the local ecosystems, native species, and even to human populations [1,2]. When it comes to molluscs, the introduction of exotic snails and slugs is a common occurrence across the world [3,4,5]. Introduced snails often come into conflict with native species, either directly (e.g., by predation) or indirectly (e.g., competing for resources), and can cause trouble to humans as agricultural pests or disease vectors [3,5].
Brazil, like the rest of South America, has been a stage for several introductions of snails and slugs in the past decades [6,7]. There are circa 30 species of exotic land snails and slugs reported from Brazil [8,9,10,11]. The exact number is hard to define because of difficulties in ascertaining the precise origin of some widespread neotropical species that could be native or introduced from somewhere else in the Americas. Some of the most infamous and widespread cases include the giant African snail Lissachatina fulica (Bowdich, 1822), the Asian tramp snail Bradybaena similaris (Férussac, 1821), the yellow cellar slug Limacus flavus (Linnaeus, 1758), and the marsh slug Deroceras laeve (Müller, 1774) [6,9]. The study of exotic terrestrial gastropods in Brazil, with the exception of L. fulica, has not been a priority for the country’s malacological research, resulting in a scarcity of data on their introductions and distributions. In face of the dire need to detect and monitor invasive species, new tools, such as community science, are emerging as useful data sources [12].
The Japanese jumping snail Ovachlamys fulgens (Gude, 1900) is an interesting case of an exotic snail introduced to Brazil. First described from Naha, Okinawa, Japan [13,14], it has since been introduced to tropical regions in several countries and territories across the world: Taiwan, American Samoa, USA (Hawaii and Florida), Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Trinidad and Tobago, and Argentina [4,5,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]. Further records from shipments originating in Thailand, Singapore, and Colombia still require confirmation [4,23]. Finally, it has also been detected as a greenhouse exotic in temperate regions such as Chicago (USA) and Sweden [4,14].
In Brazil, it was first reported in São Paulo state from a specimen collected on Ilha Porchat in 2015 and several specimens collected across the municipalities of Santos and São Vicente in 2017 [24]. Since then, O. fulgens has been reported in the states of Rio de Janeiro [23,25,26], Santa Catarina [27], Paraná [26], and Espírito Santo [12]. The brief timespan and wide geographic range of records show that O. fulgens either dispersed quickly across Brazil, went undetected for a long period as it spread, or a combination of both.
The main pathway of the introduction of O. fulgens seems to be the flower trade [24,28,29]. It is often associated with agricultural activities and is frequently intercepted in plant shipments from countries where it has become invasive [4,24,28,29]. Ovachlamys fulgens is considered a pest of orchids and, to a lesser degree, other ornamental plants, such as Dracaena marginata Lam. and Heliconia spp., and some food crops, such as avocado Persea americana Mill. and mango Mangifera indica L. [30].
Considering the alarming spread of O. fulgens through Brazil, we aim to give an updated overview of its expansion in the country through time. To achieve this, we combined data from the literature, voucher specimens in natural history collections, the community science platform iNaturalist, and verified photographic records.

2. Materials and Methods

Data used in this study were mainly gathered from specialized and gray literature, specimens from natural history collections (Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, MZUSP, Brazil; Secretaria Estadual do Meio Ambiente do Rio Grande do Sul, MCN, Brazil; and Universidade Estadual “Júlio de Mesquita Filho”, MTCLP, Brazil), field samplings, and from the iNaturalist platform (Supplementary Material S1). Data from iNaturalist (https://www.inaturalist.org/; see also https://doi.org/10.15468/ab3s5x, accessed on 30 July 2022). The observations were filtered by taxa (Ovachlamys fulgens) and country (Brazil), resulting in 42 records. We revised the identifications of all observations on iNaturalist using current literature (e.g., [24]), as well as comparative specimens from the MZUSP and MTCLP collection, to certify the identity of the species observed as O. fulgens (same methodology as [12]).

3. Results

The oldest confirmed record of the jumping snail is from 2013, in the municipality of Blumenau, in the southern state of Santa Catarina (Figure 1A). Based on subsequent records, its range in the country seems to have progressively expanded northward towards the states of Paraná, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais, and, most recently, Mato Grosso do Sul in the Midwest (Figure 1B,C). The latter two states are new records from our study. Apart from Blumenau, most of the initial records (2014–2018) were from coastal areas (Figure 1A,B), and the species seems to have reached the countryside from 2019 onward (Figure 1B,C).
The invaded localities include three environmental reserves and protected areas: Parque Estadual Xixová-Japuí (“Xixová-Japuí State Park”, São Vicente municipality, São Paulo state), Parque Estadual Serra do Mar–Núcleo Picinguaba (“Serra do Mar State Park”, Ubatuba municipality, São Paulo state), and Reserva do Bicudinho-do-brejo (“Bicudinho-do-brejo Reserve”, Guaratuba municipality, Paraná state). In all cases, the jumping snails were found in regenerating dense ombrophilous lowland forests. In Parque Estadual Xixová-Japuí, the area is subject to constant disturbance, but at the other two locations, disturbance levels are low.
The entire area of the Xixová-Japuí State Park is a secondary forest, and the jumping snails were found either near open areas invaded by the white ginger lily Hedychium coronarium J. Koenig or in forested areas in advanced regeneration states.
The Serra do Mar State Park is a large area of Atlantic Forest extending across several municipalities in São Paulo state. Urban and rural areas crisscross the park, and most of its forests are secondary. The Park is divided into ten sections called “nuclei”, and the present record of O. fulgens comes from one of them, called “Núcleo Picinguaba”. The jumping snails were found together with the flea-frog Brachycephalus hermogenesi (Giaretta & Sawaya, 1998) in an area of regenerating forest [31].
The Bicudinho-do-brejo Reserve is a private protected area, only accessed by boat and 19 km away (in a straight line) from the nearest city. The reserve is named after the marsh antwren (named “bicudinho-do-brejo” in Portuguese), Formicivora acutirostris (Bornschein, Reinert, and Teixeira, 1995), which was discovered in that locality. It is near three other protected areas: Guaricana National Park, Lagoa do Parado Municipal Park, and Saint-Hilaire/Lange National Park. The location where the jumping snails were found was historically a king palm plantation (Archontophoenix alexandrae var. beatricae [F. Muell.] H.Wendl. & Drude) and received several king palm seedlings in 2009. After that, the reserve gained the land, and there were efforts to regenerate it back into a forest. The area has not received new seedlings or soil from outside sources since 2013, so the record of O. fulgens from this reserve might predate the record from Blumenau mentioned above (though we use 2013 as the oldest confirmed record). Jumping snail specimens were found in a location with soggy soil near an open area invaded by tanner grass (Urochloa sp.) and white ginger lily, with the snails active on the lily leaves. In three years of monitoring the reserve, the species was found solely in this location, where the exotic slug Meghimatium pictum (Stoliczka, 1873) has also been recorded.
Finally, there was also a record from the immediate vicinity of the reserve Parque Estadual da Restinga de Bertioga (Bertioga municipality, São Paulo state). Here, the jumping snails were found in a patch of Restinga forest inside a residential condominium complex surrounded by the park, so its presence inside the park as well is likely. Curiously, this is the only record of this species in a Restinga environment.

4. Discussion

In roughly nine years since the oldest record (and five since the first report [24]), O. fulgens has spread to seven Brazilian states (Figure 1). It has potentially already reached areas within those states for which we still have no records. Considering its occurrence in Misiones Province in Argentina, close to the border of Paraguay [20], it is likely present in the latter country as well.
In their survey of the iNaturalist database, Rosa et al. (2022) determined that O. fulgens was the ninth most represented terrestrial gastropod from Brazil on that platform (Figure 2) [12]. That is partly a testament to its ubiquity, but it might also be related to its uniqueness. It is a species that stirs people’s curiosity due mostly to a caudal horn on its “tail” (Figure 3). It is thus an unusual and different-looking snail in the garden when compared to other species, native or otherwise, and may be a cause for over-representation bias within iNaturalist [12]. The latter case is, in part, supported by anecdotal evidence from emails that some of the present authors (MRB & LT) have received, which started with something along the lines of “I’ve seen this different snail that I’d never noticed before, is it dangerous?”.
The main pathway of introduction and spread of O. fulgens is the horticultural trade, and the species is considered a fast spreader in some countries where it has been introduced [4]. Its spread through Brazilian territory seems in line with that. A similar case to O. fulgens in Brazil is the horntail snail Macrochlamys indica Godwin-Austen, 1883. This is another exotic species that has only been recently found in the country [32] but has expanded rapidly since [12].
Most of the present records of O. fulgens in Brazil come from urban or otherwise disturbed areas, which is expected for exotic species. However, the few records from reserves mentioned above are a cause for concern. The Xixová-Japuí State Park has a reforestation program and often brings new seedlings and soil to speed up forest regeneration, which could be a source of O. fulgens. Additionally, the trail maintenance is mainly volunteers who bring wooden tiles and other artefacts from outside the park that can transport the snails. As explained above, the Xixová-Japuí State Park area is subject to more constant disturbances, but the further two records are from regenerating forests. In the Bicudinho-do-brejo Reserve, the location where O. fulgens was found used to be a king palm plantation but it has been a regenerating forest since the early 2010s. Notably, the area has not received new seedlings or soil from outside sources since 2013. The forest with the most “quality”, where O. fulgens has been recorded, was in Serra do Mar State Park. There, it was found in regenerating forest alongside the flea-frog B. hermogenesi (Bornschein et al. 2021). This frog is an ecologically demanding species that only thrives in native habitats or forests in advanced regenerating states [33].
It is presently unknown whether O. fulgens have any adverse effects on the native Brazilian fauna, gastropods, or otherwise. Its effects (if any) in other countries where it has been introduced are likewise unknown [4]. Even though several exotic species can cause problems in places where they are introduced, many become naturalized with no adverse effects. The species is phytophagous, feeding on crops and ornamental plants, and is thus considered an agricultural and/or horticultural pest in some places [15,29,30]. We speculate that O. fulgens will not cause any harm to native snail species, particularly considering it only reaches moderate population densities in Brazil and elsewhere [4,15; MRB & LT, pers. obs.].
At least one parasite of potential public health significance has been reported in O. fulgens, Angiostrongylus cantonensis (Chen, 1935), in Hawaii [34,35]. Snails act as intermediate hosts of this nematode’s larvae, and this parasite has been detected in many other species of terrestrial and freshwater gastropods, mainly in Asia (e.g., [36,37,38]). This nematode can cause eosinophilic meningitis in humans who are contaminated through the ingestion of raw gastropods [37].

5. Conclusions

Given the rapid spread of O. fulgens across Brazil (Figure 1), the species is potentially past a stage where it could be culled, although control measures are still possible given the present low density of the populations observed in the field (MRB & LT, pers. obs.). Among such measures are on-farm hygiene and sanitation practices for horticulture and the chemical-free removal of potential pests (e.g., inspection of seedlings, soil solarization, and nontoxic traps using, for instance, beer and dank cardboard).
Presently, we do not know what effect the jumping snail could have in Brazil. Thus, continued monitoring of its spread is a must, and studies focusing on its interactions with the native fauna to determine its impacts should be a concentrated priority. The number of records already present on iNaturalist (Figure 2) show that this platform (and potentially other community science initiatives) will undoubtedly continue to play an important role in monitoring efforts (see also [12,39,40,41,42]). Given the public health significance of O. fulgens (i.e., its parasites), the monitoring and control tasks should fall under the umbrella of the Brazilian Ministry of Health and the Health Departments of the affected states.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/d14100815/s1, Supplementary Material S1: Published records of Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization: R.M.R., R.B.S. and D.C.C. Writing (original draft): R.M.R. and R.B.S. Method, investigation, data curation, formal analysis, visualization, and writing (review & editing): R.M.R., R.B.S., D.C.C., L.T. and M.R.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

All data are within the paper and its Supplementary Materials.

Acknowledgments

We are very grateful to Fernanda S. Silva (MZSP) and Janine O. Arruda (MCN) for information and access to the specimens; to Andreza Arruda, Camila Muller, Larissa Lobo, and Naomy F. C. Costa for allowing us to use their observation records in the present study; to the three anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions; and to all iNaturalist contributors for listing their observations on the platform.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Maps showing the spread of Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil through the years. (A) From 2013 to 2016. (B) From 2013 to 2020. (C) From 2013 to the present. The map was created with QGIS software (QGIS Development Team; https://QGIS.org, accessed on 28 September 2022) using a public domain map from Natural Earth (https://naturalearthdata.com, accessed on 28 September 2022).
Figure 1. Maps showing the spread of Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil through the years. (A) From 2013 to 2016. (B) From 2013 to 2020. (C) From 2013 to the present. The map was created with QGIS software (QGIS Development Team; https://QGIS.org, accessed on 28 September 2022) using a public domain map from Natural Earth (https://naturalearthdata.com, accessed on 28 September 2022).
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Figure 2. Map showing the distribution of Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil according to the source of the data. The map was created with QGIS software (QGIS Development Team; https://QGIS.org, accessed on 28 September 2022) using a public domain map from Natural Earth (https://naturalearthdata.com, accessed on 28 September 2022).
Figure 2. Map showing the distribution of Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil according to the source of the data. The map was created with QGIS software (QGIS Development Team; https://QGIS.org, accessed on 28 September 2022) using a public domain map from Natural Earth (https://naturalearthdata.com, accessed on 28 September 2022).
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Figure 3. Live Ovachlamys fulgens photographed by iNaturalist user Rogerio Dias (username “rogerriodias”) in Alto da Boa Vista, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. Left: observation #74273898 (3 March 2020); Right: observation #74780463 (10 February 2021). Images extracted from iNaturalist (CC BY-NC 4.0).
Figure 3. Live Ovachlamys fulgens photographed by iNaturalist user Rogerio Dias (username “rogerriodias”) in Alto da Boa Vista, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. Left: observation #74273898 (3 March 2020); Right: observation #74780463 (10 February 2021). Images extracted from iNaturalist (CC BY-NC 4.0).
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Rosa, R.M.; Salvador, R.B.; Teixeira, L.; Bornschein, M.R.; Cavallari, D.C. The Rapid Expansion of the Jumping Snail Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil. Diversity 2022, 14, 815. https://doi.org/10.3390/d14100815

AMA Style

Rosa RM, Salvador RB, Teixeira L, Bornschein MR, Cavallari DC. The Rapid Expansion of the Jumping Snail Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil. Diversity. 2022; 14(10):815. https://doi.org/10.3390/d14100815

Chicago/Turabian Style

Rosa, Rafael Masson, Rodrigo Brincalepe Salvador, Larissa Teixeira, Marcos Ricardo Bornschein, and Daniel Caracanhas Cavallari. 2022. "The Rapid Expansion of the Jumping Snail Ovachlamys fulgens in Brazil" Diversity 14, no. 10: 815. https://doi.org/10.3390/d14100815

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