fbpx
Wikipedia

Spanish slug

The Spanish slug (Arion vulgaris, but formerly widely referred to as Arion lusitanicus owing to a misidentification) is an air-breathing land slug, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Arionidae, the roundback slugs. Other vernacular names are Lusitanian slug, Iberian slug, and killer slug.

Spanish slug
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Order: Stylommatophora
Family: Arionidae
Genus: Arion
Species:
A. vulgaris
Binomial name
Arion vulgaris
Synonyms

Arion rufus var. vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855
Arion lusitanicus auct. non Mabille

It is a large, conspicuous slug, which has spread across much of Europe since the 1950s and now reached North America. It may attain high densities and be a serious horticultural and agricultural pest. The life cycle is annual, with adults appearing in summer and dying off before winter.

Confusion over nomenclature edit

The Spanish slug was identified as Arion lusitanicus when it was first reported as an invading species in France in 1956,[2] and hence it is sometimes called the Lusitanian slug (e.g.[3]). This was a case of misidentification. In slugs, it is often impossible to find external characters that distinguish closely related species using external features, as colouration can be quite variable, and the rather plastic anatomy makes diagnostic anatomical features difficult to establish. The current consensus is that the true Arion lusitanicus is a species of the western part of the Iberian Peninsula.[4][5] Examination of slugs from the Serra da Arrábida mountains in Portugal from where it was originally described by Jules François Mabille in 1868 showed that the true A. lusitanicus differed from the invader in its internal anatomy, the shape of the spermatophore and the number of chromosomes.[6][7]

The misidentification was first recognised in 1997,[4] and more widely publicised in an atlas of British molluscs.[8] Arion vulgaris was proposed as a substitute name[9] based on a drawing of the genitalia in an 1855 work by Alfred Moquin-Tandon.[1] However, it is debatable whether the name applies to this drawing, so one temporary solution was to use the name Arion lusitanicus auct. non Mabille (i.e. "as used by authors other than Mabille").[10] Nevertheless, A. vulgaris has increasingly been used since, and this is the proposal that has been formally submitted to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.[11][12]

It has been erroneously reported that the slug was originally introduced via vegetables from Spain. These reports are usually based on outdated information published in pre-1999 literature. The common name "Spanish slug" was further based on the unsubstantiated assumption that the species would not only live in Portugal, but also in Spain. Arion vulgaris seems to be rare in Spain.[13] Another name sometimes applied is the "Iberian slug".

Distribution edit

The native distribution of Arion vulgaris is not exactly known. Genetic evidence (the higher incidence of rare alleles) suggests an origin in France or Spain,[13] contrary to earlier genetic analyses that did not adequately sample these regions.[3] In Britain the slug was first recorded in 1954,[8] which is not an indication of it being native there. It is presumed that the specimen illustrated in Moquin-Tandon's original 1855 description[1] was from France.

Non-indigenous distribution edit

The non-indigenous distribution of Arion vulgaris includes almost the whole of Western and Central Europe and extends to various parts of Southern, Northern and Eastern Europe.[14] The first confirmed Asian record was in 2022 from Armenia.[15] A 2017 report from the Asian part of Turkey was not based on dissection and is liable to be A. ater s.l.[16] Arion vulgaris is now also recorded from Canada (2009)[17][18] and Mexico.[19] Reports of "A. lusitanicus" from Madeira may be copied from an 1895 report,[20] in which case they need confirmation; similarly, a 1975 report from the Azores[21] could be of the true A. lusitanicus.[5] Claims of its presence in Algeria also appear unsupported.[22]

Chronological overview of expansion of Arion vulgaris in Europe:

Arion vulgaris is opening its pneumostome.
 
An adult of Arion vulgaris

This species has not yet become established in the USA, but it is considered to represent a potentially serious threat as a pest, an invasive species which could negatively affect agriculture, natural ecosystems, human health or commerce. Therefore, it has been suggested that this species be given top national quarantine significance in the USA.[52]

British authorities were also concerned as of 2014 that it may become a major pest.[23][24]

Description edit

 
Juveniles of Arion vulgaris

The size of the adult slug is 60–140 mm. The colour ranges from yellow to black, but is most commonly brick-red, dirty orange, or brown. The tentacles are darker. Adult A. vulgaris may not differ in external appearance from Arion rufus, and so reliable identification requires dissection to examine the genitalia. In contrast, the juveniles of these species can be distinguished because only A. vulgaris has longitudinal bands.[53] However, juveniles of other large Arion species such as Arion flagellus also have longitudinal bands.[54]

Reproductive system: The atrium is small. The adjacent part of the oviduct is dilated and muscular, with the same diameter as the atrium and containing a longitudinal ligula. This distinguishes A. vulgaris from Arion ater s.l., in which the oviduct is thinner and the atrium is larger and contains the ligula. Arion flagellus also has a ligula in the dilated part of the oviduct, but the ligula does not reach as far towards the atrium as in A. vulgaris. The spermatheca is spherical, its diameter twice that of the oviduct.[54][55]

 
The reproductive system of Arion vulgaris is important for species identification: at = atrium; bc = bursa copulatrix; ep = epiphallus; ov = oviduct
 
Reproductive system of Arion vulgaris showing small and short atrium (A), and the long, muscular distal part of the oviduct (O). E – epiphallus; VD – vas deferens; B – bursa copulatrix[27]
 
Reproductive system of Arion vulgaris showing long folds (ligula) inside the oviduct[27]

Ecology edit

 
A Spanish slug eating a dead conspecific
 
A Spanish slug eating clover
A Spanish slug eating a leaf

The habitat of Arion vulgaris includes all agricultural ecosystems, as well as natural environments such as river and lake margins, forest edges, forests in valleys or meadows. In Switzerland it has been found up to 1700 m altitude.[53]

It is a serious agricultural and horticultural pest in large parts of Europe, eating a cosmopolitan range of growing plant parts as well as decaying vegetation. Opportunistically it eats carrion, including squashed conspecifics. It is active mostly during the night and in wet weather during the day. Densities can reach 50 individuals per m2 or locally even higher.[56][57]

Whilst a slug can crawl several metres within a night,[57] long-distance dispersal is believed to be on vegetables, on horticultural seedlings, and on plant debris disposed of as waste.[56]

The species has an annual life cycle with mating starting in July and eggs first laid some weeks later in late summer. Clutches are laid on the soil surface or in crevices up to 10 cm underground, with an average clutch size of about 70 eggs; an adult slug typically lays about 400 eggs in its lifetime. The eggs hatch from autumn to spring. Neither eggs nor slugs can survive temperatures below ―3 °C, so overwinter survival depends on hiding under shelters.[58] Adults normally die off in autumn before winter frosts.[56]

As an invasive species edit

Arion vulgaris is considered among the 100 worst alien species in Europe in DAISIE European Invasive Alien Species Gateway,[14] and this is the only land gastropod among them.[14] Arion vulgaris is the worst slug pest in Europe[14] and it has an important economic, ecological, and social impact.[14]

The local name of the slug in the regions it has invaded is typically a translation of "Spanish slug". In recent years, as its dominance has increased, it has been nicknamed "killer slug",[59] perhaps due to its tendency to eat dead or weaker individuals of the species, although its destructive impact on gardens may seem just as appropriate a reason for the name.

Like other pulmonate snails and slugs, it is a hermaphrodite and this species has the capacity to self-fertilize,[60] so that one single slug can start an infestation. Long-distance transport of produce and garden plants has been assumed to be a common means of its rapid dispersal.

Besides causing economic damage, the arrival of A. vulgaris has often been associated with the disappearance within a few years of the similarly sized congener Arion ater s.l., at least in synanthropic habitats.[55] While the two species coexist they may mate with each other[61] and produce fertile offspring.[62] Hybrids are often identifiable by their intermediate genital anatomy.[55][63] It has been proposed that in Scandinavia crossing of A. vulgaris and the indigenous A. ater ater might have produced a more frost-resistant variety.[64] However, genetic investigations have not shown that introgression of A. ater genes into A. vulgaris persist for long once the native species has disappeared.[63] In the Swiss Alps, Arion ater rufus persists only at high elevations, and hybrids with A. vulgaris occur in a contact zone along the altitudinal gradient.[62]

Given the densities that A. vulgaris can attain, other ecological effects of its invasion on the native flora and fauna are to be expected. For instance, the seeds that it consumes are less likely to survive to germinate than with other gastropods with which it was compared.[65] In Sweden complete defoliation of native shrubs in natural woodland has been reported.[66]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Moquin-Tandon A. (1855). Histoire naturelle des mollusques terrestres et fluviatiles de la France contenant des études générales sur leur anatomie et leur physiologie et la description particulière des genres, des espèces et des variétés. Tome second. pp. 1-646, atlas 1-92, Pl. I-LIV [= 1-54]. Paris. (Baillière).
  2. ^ a b van Regteren Altena, C.O. (1956). "Notes sur les limaces, 3. Sur la présence en France d'Arion lusitanicus Mabille". Journal de Conchyliologie. 95: 89–99.
  3. ^ a b Pfenninger, M.; Weigand, A.; Bálint, M.; Klussmann‐Kolb, A. (June 2014). "Misperceived invasion: the Lusitanian slug (Arion lusitanicus auct. non-Mabille or Arion vulgaris Moquin‐Tandon 1855) is native to Central Europe". Evolutionary Applications. 7 (6): 702–713. doi:10.1111/eva.12177. PMC 4105919. PMID 25067951.
  4. ^ a b Castillejo, J. (1997). "Las babosas de la familia Arionidae Gray, 1840 en la Península Ibérica e Islas Baleares. Morfología y distribución. (Gastropoda, Pulmonata, terrestria nuda)". Revista, Real Academia Galega de Ciencias. 16: 51–118.
  5. ^ a b Holyoak, D.T.; Holyoak, G.A.; Mendes, R.M. da Costa (2019). "A revised check-list of the land and freshwater Mollusca (Gastropoda and Bivalvia) of mainland Portugal". Iberus. 37: 113–168.
  6. ^ (in Spanish) Castillejo J. (1997). Babosas del Noroeste Ibérico. Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain, 192 pp.
  7. ^ Columba, M.; Backeljau, T.; Gregorini, A.; Jordaens, K. (2007). "Chromosome numbers and chromosomal evolution in the land snail genus Arion (Gastropoda, Pulmonata)". In Jordaens, K.; Van Houtte, N.; Van Goethem, J.; Backeljau, T. (eds.). World Congress of 390 Malacology, Antwerp, Belgium, 15–20 July 2007. Abstracts. Antwerp: Unitas Malacologica. p. 40.
  8. ^ a b c Kerney M. (1999). Atlas of the land and freshwater molluscs of Britain and Ireland. pp. 1-264. Colchester. (Harley).
  9. ^ Falkner, G.; Ripken, T.E.J.; Falkner, M. (2002). Mollusques continentaux de France. Liste de référence annotée et bibliographie. Paris: Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle.
  10. ^ Bank, R.A.; Falkner, G.; von Proschwitz, T. (2007). "CLECOM-Project: a revised checklist of the non-marine Mollusca of Britain and Ireland". Heldia. 5: 41–72.
  11. ^ Balashov, Igor (May 2018). "Case 3685 — Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855 (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Arionidae): proposed validation of the specific name as available". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 75: 12–15. doi:10.21805/bzn.v75.a006. ISSN 0007-5167. S2CID 90067777.
  12. ^ Kadolsky, D.; Welter-Schultes, F.; Bank, R.A. (31 December 2018). "Comment (Case 3685) – Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855 (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Arionidae): modified proposal to preserve the specific name in its accustomed sense". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 75 (1): 251. doi:10.21805/bzn.v75.a051. S2CID 92607223.
  13. ^ a b c Zemanova, Miriam A.; Knop, Eva; Heckel, Gerald (November 2016). "Phylogeographic past and invasive presence of Arion pest slugs in Europe". Molecular Ecology. 25 (22): 5747–5764. doi:10.1111/mec.13860. PMID 27664400. S2CID 22971610.
  14. ^ a b c d e DAISIE European Invasive Alien Species Gateway. Arion vulgaris. Last updated 30 October 2006, accessed 27 September 2009.
  15. ^ Arzumanyan, M.; Zhamakochyan, G.; Torosyan, H.; Ghrmajyan, A.; Arakelyan, M.; Nanagulyan, S.; Margaryan, L.; Aghayan, S.; Davis, R.; Turóci, Á. (8 April 2024). "First record of Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855 (Arionidae) from Armenia". Biodiversity Data Journal. 12. doi:10.3897/BDJ.12.e121176. PMC 11019258.
  16. ^ Reise, H.; Arslangündoğdu, Z.; Schlitt, B.; Hutchinson, J.M.C.; Hızal, E.; Bacak, E. (11 December 2018). "First records of the terrestrial slug Arion ater s. l. (Linnaeus, 1758) (Pulmonata: Arionidae) from Turkey". Folia Malacologica. 26 (4): 213–220. doi:10.12657/folmal.026.024. S2CID 92547139.
  17. ^ Zemanova, M.A.; Broennimann, O.; Guisan, A.; Knop, E.; Heckel, G. (November 2018). "Slimy invasion: climatic niche and current and future biogeography of Arion slug invaders". Diversity and Distributions. 24 (11): 1627–1640. doi:10.1111/ddi.12789. S2CID 91013722.
  18. ^ L’Heureux, É.; Lafond, J.; Angers, B. (2023). "First record of the invasive slug Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1885 (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Arionidae) in Quebec (Canada)". Bioinvasions Records. 12 (1): 136–150. doi:10.3391/bir.2023.12.1.12.
  19. ^ Araiza-Gómez, V.; Naranjo-García, E.; Zúñiga, G. (2021). "Occurrence in Mexico of two European invasive slug species: Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855 and Arion intermedius (Norman, 1852)". BioInvasions Records. 10: 10–20. doi:10.3391/bir.2021.10.1.02. S2CID 234118330.
  20. ^ Kraepelin, K. (1895). "Zoologische Ergebnisse einer Frühjahrs - Exkursion nach Madeira und den Canarischen Inseln". Verhandlungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins in Hamburg. 2: 6–17.
  21. ^ Backhuys, W. (1975). Zoogeography and taxonomy of the land and freshwater molluscs of the Azores. Amsterdam: Backhuys and Meesters. ISBN 9789004064478.
  22. ^ Borredá, V.; Martínez-Ortí, A. (2017). "Contribution to the knowledge of the terrestrial slugs (Gastropoda, Pulmonata) of the Maghreb". Iberus. 35 (1): 1–10.
  23. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  24. ^ a b "Giant slugs invade Lincolnshire". Lincolnshire Echo. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  25. ^ Turner H., Kuiper J. G. J., Thew N., Bernasconi R., Rüetschi J., Wüthrich M. & Gosteli M. (1998). Fauna Helvetica 2. Atlas der Mollusken der Schweiz und Liechtensteins. pp. 1-527. Neuchâtel.
  26. ^ Cesari, P. (1978). "Nota preliminare sulla diffusione in Italia e l'esplosione demografica nel Veneto di Arion lusitanicus Mabille". Lavori, Società veneziana di Scienze naturali. 3: 3–7.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h Păpureanu A.-M., Reise H. & Varga A. (2014). "First records of the invasive slug Arion lusitanicus auct. non Mabille (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Arionidae) in Romania". Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 13: 6-11. PDF
  28. ^ Schmid, G. (1970). "Arion lusitanicus in Deutschland". Archiv für Molluskenkunde. 100: 95–102.
  29. ^ (in German) Reischütz P. L. & Stojaspal F.J. (1971). "Bemerkenswerte Mollusken aus Ostösterreich" [Remarkable Mollusks from East Austria].Mitteilungen der zoologischen Gesellschaft Braunau 1/13: 339-344
  30. ^ Risch, P.; Backeljau, T. (1989). "On the occurrence of Arion lusitanicus Mabille, 1868 in Belgium (Mollusca: Pulmonata)". Annalen van de Koninklijke Belgische Vereniging voor Dierkunde. 119 (1): 25–38.
  31. ^ a b von Proschwitz, T. (1992). "Spanska skogsnigeln - Arion lusitanicus Mabille - en art i snabb spridning med människan i Sverige". Göteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum, Årstryk. 1992: 35–42.
  32. ^ a b Wiktor, A. (1996). "The slugs of the former Yugoslavia (Gastropoda terrestria nuda - Arionidae, Milacidae, Limacidae, Agriolimacidae)". Annales Zoologici. 46: 1–110.
  33. ^ Anderson, R. (2010). "The invasive pest slug Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon (= A. lusitanicus Mabille) (Mollusca: Arionidae) confirmed for Ireland, with an appeal for records". The Irish Naturalists' Journal. 31 (1): 69–70. JSTOR 41419234.
  34. ^ Kozłowski, J.; Kozłowski, R.J. (1 December 2011). "Expansion of the invasive slug species Arion lusitanicus Mabille, 1868 (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Stylommatophora) and dangers to garden crops - a literature review with some new data". Folia Malacologica. 19 (4): 249–258. doi:10.2478/v10125-011-0005-8.
  35. ^ Hatteland, B.A.; Roth, S.; Andersen, A.; Kaasa, K.; Støa, B.; Solhøy, T. (13 February 2013). "Distribution and spread of the invasive slug Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon in Norway". Fauna Norvegica. 32: 13–26. doi:10.5324/fn.v32i0.1473. hdl:1956/12402.
  36. ^ de Winter, A.J. (1989). "Arion lusitanicus Mabille in Nederland (Gastropoda, Pulmonata, Arionidae)". Basteria. 53: 49–51.
  37. ^ Quinteiro, J.; Rodriguez-Castro, J.; Castillejo, J.; Iglesias-Pineiro, J.; Rey-Mendez, M. (May 2005). "Phylogeny of slug species of the genus Arion: evidence of monophyly of Iberian endemics and of the existence of relict species in Pyrenean refuges". Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 43 (2): 139–148. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.2005.00307.x.
  38. ^ (in Finnish) Valovirta I. (2001). Tehokkaan leviämisen mestari 9 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine. accessed 27 September 2009.
  39. ^ Nikander, Anniina (15 July 2021). "Ne liikkuvat öisin ja syövät kaiken – tappajaetanoiden määrä räjähti Suomessa". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  40. ^ Dvořák, L.; Horsák, M. (2003). "Současné poznatky o plzáku Arion lusitanicus (Mollusca: Pulmonata) v České republice". Časopis Slezského Muzea Opava (A). 52: 67–71.
  41. ^ Bloch, Dorete (2003). "Morsnigilin ella hin spanski snigilin". Frøði. 1: 16–18.
  42. ^ Vuksa, M.; Djedovic, S.; Stojnic, B. (2003). "IPM approach to control of the slug Arion lusitanicus Mabille – a new pest species in Serbia and Montenegro". In Dussart, GBJ (ed.). Slugs & snails: agricultural, veterinary & environmental perspectives. BCPC Symposium Proceedings No. 80. Alton, UK: British Crop Protection Council. pp. 147–152. ISBN 1901396800.
  43. ^ Ingimarsdóttir, M.; Ólafsson, E. (2005). "Spánarsnigilin finnst á Íslandi, bví miður". Náttúrufræðingurin. 73: 75–78.
  44. ^ Stankovic, S.V.; Stojkoska, E.; Norris, A. (2006). "Annotated checklist of the terrestrial gastropods (Gastropoda) of the Republic of Macedonia". In Petkovski, S. (ed.). Anniversary Proceedings (1926–2006). Eighty years of achievement by the Macedonian Museum of Natural History. Skopje: Macedonian Museum of Natural History. pp. 43–55.
  45. ^ Gural-Sverlova, N.V.; Gural, R.I. (2011). "<reМорфологические, анатомические и поведенческие особенности слизней из комплекса Arion lusitanicus (Arionidae) на западе Украины. [Morphological, anatomical and behavioural peculiarities of the slugs from the Arion lusitanicus complex in Western Ukraine]" (PDF). Ruthenica (in Russian). 21 (2): 97–111.
  46. ^ a b c Balashov, I.; Khomenko, A.; Kovalov, V.; Harbar, O. (2018). "Fast recent expansion of the Spanish slug (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Arionidae) across Ukraine". Vestnik Zoologii. 52 (6): 451–456. doi:10.2478/vzoo-2018-0046. S2CID 91293329.
  47. ^ Adomaitis, M.; Skujienė, G. (2016). "Invazinė šliužų rūšies Arion lusitanicus (Mabille, 1868) (Mollusca, Pulmonata, Arionidae) plitimo Lietuvoje perspektyvos". Lietuvos Biologinė: Būklė, Struktūra, and Apsauga. 4: 41–49.
  48. ^ Palginõmm, M. (2009). "Lusitaanlane luubi all". Eesti Loodus. 4.
  49. ^ Jakubāne, I.; Pilāte, D.; Dreijers, E.; Zolovs, M. (2016). "Distribution of "Spanish slug" Arion lusitanicus auct. non Mabille 1868 (or Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855) (Gastropoda:Arionidae) in Latvia". Acta Biologica Universitatis Daugavpiliensis. 16 (2): 175–180.
  50. ^ Schikov, Evgeniy V.; Komarov, Yuriy E. (10 December 2021). "Detection of an invasive species Arion vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855 (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Arionidae) in the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania". Folia Malacologica. 29 (4): 222–228. doi:10.12657/folmal.029.026. S2CID 244933127.
  51. ^ Ostrovsky, A.M. (2022). "Новые находки синантропных слизней Limacus maculatus и Arion vulgaris (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Stylommatophora) в Беларуси [New records of synanthropic slugs Limacus maculatus and Arion vulgaris (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Stylommatophora) in Belarus]". Ruthenica. 32 (2): 93–98. doi:10.35885/ruthenica.2022.32(2).6. S2CID 248094454.
  52. ^ Cowie, R.H.; Dillon, R.T.; Robinson, D.G.; Smith, J.W. (July 2009). "Alien non-marine snails and slugs of priority quarantine importance in the United States: a preliminary risk assessment". American Malacological Bulletin. 27 (1–2): 113–132. doi:10.4003/006.027.0210. S2CID 54919881.
  53. ^ a b Welter-Schultes, F. "Species summary for Arion vulgaris". AnimalBase. SUB Göttingen. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  54. ^ a b Rowson, B.; Turner, J.; Anderson, R.; Symondson, B. (2014). Slugs of Britain & Ireland : identification, understanding and control (First ed.). Telford: Field Stidies Council. ISBN 9781908819130.
  55. ^ a b c Reise, H.; Schwarzer, A.-K.; Hutchinson, J.M.C.; Schlitt, B. (2020). "Genital morphology differentiates three subspecies of the terrestrial slug Arion ater (Linnæus, 1758) s.l. and reveals a continuum of intermediates with the invasive A. vulgaris Moquin-Tandon, 1855". Folia Malacologica. 28 (1): 1–34. doi:10.12657/folmal.028.001. S2CID 216497215.
  56. ^ a b c Kozłowski, J. (2007). "The distribution, biology, population dynamics and harmfulness of Arion lusitanicus Mabille, 1868 (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Arionidae) in Poland" (PDF). Journal of Plant Protection Research. 47: 219–230.
  57. ^ a b Grimm, B.; Schaumberger, K. (August 2002). "Daily activity of the pest slug Arion lusitanicus under laboratory conditions". Annals of Applied Biology. 141 (1): 35–44. doi:10.1111/j.1744-7348.2002.tb00193.x.
  58. ^ Slotsbo, S.; Hansen, L.; Holmstrup, M. (February 2011). "Low temperature survival in different life stages of the Iberian slug, Arion lusitanicus". Cryobiology. 62 (1): 68–73. doi:10.1016/j.cryobiol.2010.12.005. PMID 21168402.
  59. ^ "Killer slugs and other aliens — Europe's biodiversity is disappearing at an alarming rate". European Environment Agency. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  60. ^ Hagnell, J.; von Proschwitz, T.; Schander, C. (2006). "Self-fertilising observed in the invasive Iberian slug Arion lusitanicus, Mabille 1868". Journal of Conchology. 39: 107.
  61. ^ Dreijers, E.; Reise, H.; Hutchinson, J.M.C. (2013). "Mating of the slugs Arion lusitanicus auct. non Mabille and A. rufus (L.): different genitalia and mating behaviours are incomplete barriers to interspecific sperm exchange". Journal of Molluscan Studies. 79 (1): 51–63. doi:10.1093/mollus/eys033.
  62. ^ a b Zemanova, M.A.; Knop, E.; Heckel, G. (2017). "Introgressive replacement of natives by invading Arion pest slugs". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 14908. Bibcode:2017NatSR...714908Z. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-14619-y. PMC 5668256. PMID 29097725.
  63. ^ a b Hutchinson, J.M.C.; Schlitt, B.; Reise, H. (6 September 2021). "One town's invasion by the pest slug Arion vulgaris (Gastropoda: Arionidae): microsatellites reveal little introgression from Arion ater and limited gene flow between infraspecific races in both species". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 134 (4): 835–850. doi:10.1093/biolinnean/blab082.
  64. ^ Hagnell, J.; Schander, C; von Proschwitz, T. (2003). "Hybridisation of arionids: the rise of a super slug?". In Dussart, GBJ (ed.). Slugs & snails: agricultural, veterinary and environmental perspectives. Symposium Proceedings No. 80. Alton, UK: British Crop Protection Council. pp. 221–226.
  65. ^ Blattmann, T.; Boch, S.; Türke, M.; Knop, E. (25 September 2013). "Gastropod Seed Dispersal: An Invasive Slug Destroys Far More Seeds in Its Gut than Native Gastropods". PLOS ONE. 8 (9): e75243. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...875243B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075243. PMC 3783466. PMID 24086477.
  66. ^ von Proschwitz, T. (1997). "Utbredning och spridning av spansk skogssnigel [Arion lusitanicus Mabille] och röd skogssnigel [Arion rufus (L.)] – en översikt av utvecklingen i Sverigerige. Göteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum, Årstryck". Göteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum, Årstryck. 1996: 27–45.

External links edit

  • Arion vulgaris at Animalbase taxonomy,short description, distribution, biology,status (threats), images
  • Arion vulgaris images at Encyclopedia of Life
  • Slug controls (on Wikibooks)

spanish, slug, arion, vulgaris, formerly, widely, referred, arion, lusitanicus, owing, misidentification, breathing, land, slug, terrestrial, pulmonate, gastropod, mollusk, family, arionidae, roundback, slugs, other, vernacular, names, lusitanian, slug, iberia. The Spanish slug Arion vulgaris but formerly widely referred to as Arion lusitanicus owing to a misidentification is an air breathing land slug a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Arionidae the roundback slugs Other vernacular names are Lusitanian slug Iberian slug and killer slug Spanish slug Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Mollusca Class Gastropoda Subclass Heterobranchia Order Stylommatophora Family Arionidae Genus Arion Species A vulgaris Binomial name Arion vulgarisMoquin Tandon 1855 1 Synonyms Arion rufus var vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille It is a large conspicuous slug which has spread across much of Europe since the 1950s and now reached North America It may attain high densities and be a serious horticultural and agricultural pest The life cycle is annual with adults appearing in summer and dying off before winter Contents 1 Confusion over nomenclature 2 Distribution 2 1 Non indigenous distribution 3 Description 4 Ecology 5 As an invasive species 6 References 7 External linksConfusion over nomenclature editThe Spanish slug was identified as Arion lusitanicus when it was first reported as an invading species in France in 1956 2 and hence it is sometimes called the Lusitanian slug e g 3 This was a case of misidentification In slugs it is often impossible to find external characters that distinguish closely related species using external features as colouration can be quite variable and the rather plastic anatomy makes diagnostic anatomical features difficult to establish The current consensus is that the true Arion lusitanicus is a species of the western part of the Iberian Peninsula 4 5 Examination of slugs from the Serra da Arrabida mountains in Portugal from where it was originally described by Jules Francois Mabille in 1868 showed that the true A lusitanicus differed from the invader in its internal anatomy the shape of the spermatophore and the number of chromosomes 6 7 The misidentification was first recognised in 1997 4 and more widely publicised in an atlas of British molluscs 8 Arion vulgaris was proposed as a substitute name 9 based on a drawing of the genitalia in an 1855 work by Alfred Moquin Tandon 1 However it is debatable whether the name applies to this drawing so one temporary solution was to use the name Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille i e as used by authors other than Mabille 10 Nevertheless A vulgaris has increasingly been used since and this is the proposal that has been formally submitted to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 11 12 It has been erroneously reported that the slug was originally introduced via vegetables from Spain These reports are usually based on outdated information published in pre 1999 literature The common name Spanish slug was further based on the unsubstantiated assumption that the species would not only live in Portugal but also in Spain Arion vulgaris seems to be rare in Spain 13 Another name sometimes applied is the Iberian slug Distribution editThe native distribution of Arion vulgaris is not exactly known Genetic evidence the higher incidence of rare alleles suggests an origin in France or Spain 13 contrary to earlier genetic analyses that did not adequately sample these regions 3 In Britain the slug was first recorded in 1954 8 which is not an indication of it being native there It is presumed that the specimen illustrated in Moquin Tandon s original 1855 description 1 was from France Non indigenous distribution edit The non indigenous distribution of Arion vulgaris includes almost the whole of Western and Central Europe and extends to various parts of Southern Northern and Eastern Europe 14 The first confirmed Asian record was in 2022 from Armenia 15 A 2017 report from the Asian part of Turkey was not based on dissection and is liable to be A ater s l 16 Arion vulgaris is now also recorded from Canada 2009 17 18 and Mexico 19 Reports of A lusitanicus from Madeira may be copied from an 1895 report 20 in which case they need confirmation similarly a 1975 report from the Azores 21 could be of the true A lusitanicus 5 Claims of its presence in Algeria also appear unsupported 22 Chronological overview of expansion of Arion vulgaris in Europe Great Britain since 1954 8 later spread to Lincolnshire and Norfolk in 2012 23 24 France expansion from native range since 1955 2 Switzerland since at least 1956 25 Italy since 1965 26 Bulgaria since 1966 27 Germany since 1969 28 source source source source source source source Arion vulgaris is opening its pneumostome Austria since 1971 29 Belgium since 1973 30 Sweden since 1975 31 Slovenia since 1982 83 32 Croatia since 1982 83 32 Ireland since 1984 33 Hungary since 1985 27 Poland likely since 1987 certainly by 1993 34 Norway since 1988 35 Netherlands since 1989 36 Spain possibly native only known from north east since 1990 37 13 Finland since 1990 38 abundant in south 39 Czech Republic since 1991 40 Denmark since 1991 31 Slovakia since 1992 27 Faroe Islands since 1996 41 Serbia since 2002 27 Montenegro since 2002 42 Iceland since 2003 43 Macedonia since at least 2003 44 Ukraine since 2007 27 45 subsequently spread across almost whole country 46 Lithuania since 2008 47 Estonia since 2008 48 Latvia since 2009 49 Russia since 2009 greenhouses since 2019 outdoors 50 2018 record not confirmed anatomically 46 Romania since 2012 27 Belarus since 2020 51 2018 record not confirmed anatomically 46 nbsp An adult of Arion vulgaris This species has not yet become established in the USA but it is considered to represent a potentially serious threat as a pest an invasive species which could negatively affect agriculture natural ecosystems human health or commerce Therefore it has been suggested that this species be given top national quarantine significance in the USA 52 British authorities were also concerned as of 2014 that it may become a major pest 23 24 Description edit nbsp Juveniles of Arion vulgaris The size of the adult slug is 60 140 mm The colour ranges from yellow to black but is most commonly brick red dirty orange or brown The tentacles are darker Adult A vulgaris may not differ in external appearance from Arion rufus and so reliable identification requires dissection to examine the genitalia In contrast the juveniles of these species can be distinguished because only A vulgaris has longitudinal bands 53 However juveniles of other large Arion species such as Arion flagellus also have longitudinal bands 54 Reproductive system The atrium is small The adjacent part of the oviduct is dilated and muscular with the same diameter as the atrium and containing a longitudinal ligula This distinguishes A vulgaris from Arion ater s l in which the oviduct is thinner and the atrium is larger and contains the ligula Arion flagellus also has a ligula in the dilated part of the oviduct but the ligula does not reach as far towards the atrium as in A vulgaris The spermatheca is spherical its diameter twice that of the oviduct 54 55 nbsp The reproductive system of Arion vulgaris is important for species identification at atrium bc bursa copulatrix ep epiphallus ov oviduct nbsp Reproductive system of Arion vulgaris showing small and short atrium A and the long muscular distal part of the oviduct O E epiphallus VD vas deferens B bursa copulatrix 27 nbsp Reproductive system of Arion vulgaris showing long folds ligula inside the oviduct 27 Ecology edit nbsp A Spanish slug eating a dead conspecific nbsp A Spanish slug eating clover source source source source source source A Spanish slug eating a leaf The habitat of Arion vulgaris includes all agricultural ecosystems as well as natural environments such as river and lake margins forest edges forests in valleys or meadows In Switzerland it has been found up to 1700 m altitude 53 It is a serious agricultural and horticultural pest in large parts of Europe eating a cosmopolitan range of growing plant parts as well as decaying vegetation Opportunistically it eats carrion including squashed conspecifics It is active mostly during the night and in wet weather during the day Densities can reach 50 individuals per m2 or locally even higher 56 57 Whilst a slug can crawl several metres within a night 57 long distance dispersal is believed to be on vegetables on horticultural seedlings and on plant debris disposed of as waste 56 The species has an annual life cycle with mating starting in July and eggs first laid some weeks later in late summer Clutches are laid on the soil surface or in crevices up to 10 cm underground with an average clutch size of about 70 eggs an adult slug typically lays about 400 eggs in its lifetime The eggs hatch from autumn to spring Neither eggs nor slugs can survive temperatures below 3 C so overwinter survival depends on hiding under shelters 58 Adults normally die off in autumn before winter frosts 56 As an invasive species editArion vulgaris is considered among the 100 worst alien species in Europe in DAISIE European Invasive Alien Species Gateway 14 and this is the only land gastropod among them 14 Arion vulgaris is the worst slug pest in Europe 14 and it has an important economic ecological and social impact 14 The local name of the slug in the regions it has invaded is typically a translation of Spanish slug In recent years as its dominance has increased it has been nicknamed killer slug 59 perhaps due to its tendency to eat dead or weaker individuals of the species although its destructive impact on gardens may seem just as appropriate a reason for the name Like other pulmonate snails and slugs it is a hermaphrodite and this species has the capacity to self fertilize 60 so that one single slug can start an infestation Long distance transport of produce and garden plants has been assumed to be a common means of its rapid dispersal Besides causing economic damage the arrival of A vulgaris has often been associated with the disappearance within a few years of the similarly sized congener Arion ater s l at least in synanthropic habitats 55 While the two species coexist they may mate with each other 61 and produce fertile offspring 62 Hybrids are often identifiable by their intermediate genital anatomy 55 63 It has been proposed that in Scandinavia crossing of A vulgaris and the indigenous A ater ater might have produced a more frost resistant variety 64 However genetic investigations have not shown that introgression of A ater genes into A vulgaris persist for long once the native species has disappeared 63 In the Swiss Alps Arion ater rufus persists only at high elevations and hybrids with A vulgaris occur in a contact zone along the altitudinal gradient 62 Given the densities that A vulgaris can attain other ecological effects of its invasion on the native flora and fauna are to be expected For instance the seeds that it consumes are less likely to survive to germinate than with other gastropods with which it was compared 65 In Sweden complete defoliation of native shrubs in natural woodland has been reported 66 References edit a b c Moquin Tandon A 1855 Histoire naturelle des mollusques terrestres et fluviatiles de la France contenant des etudes generales sur leur anatomie et leur physiologie et la description particuliere des genres des especes et des varietes Tome second pp 1 646 atlas 1 92 Pl I LIV 1 54 Paris Bailliere a b van Regteren Altena C O 1956 Notes sur les limaces 3 Sur la presence en France d Arion lusitanicus Mabille Journal de Conchyliologie 95 89 99 a b Pfenninger M Weigand A Balint M Klussmann Kolb A June 2014 Misperceived invasion the Lusitanian slug Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille or Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 is native to Central Europe Evolutionary Applications 7 6 702 713 doi 10 1111 eva 12177 PMC 4105919 PMID 25067951 a b Castillejo J 1997 Las babosas de la familia Arionidae Gray 1840 en la Peninsula Iberica e Islas Baleares Morfologia y distribucion Gastropoda Pulmonata terrestria nuda Revista Real Academia Galega de Ciencias 16 51 118 a b Holyoak D T Holyoak G A Mendes R M da Costa 2019 A revised check list of the land and freshwater Mollusca Gastropoda and Bivalvia of mainland Portugal Iberus 37 113 168 in Spanish Castillejo J 1997 Babosas del Noroeste Iberico Universidade de Santiago de Compostela Spain 192 pp Columba M Backeljau T Gregorini A Jordaens K 2007 Chromosome numbers and chromosomal evolution in the land snail genus Arion Gastropoda Pulmonata In Jordaens K Van Houtte N Van Goethem J Backeljau T eds World Congress of 390 Malacology Antwerp Belgium 15 20 July 2007 Abstracts Antwerp Unitas Malacologica p 40 a b c Kerney M 1999 Atlas of the land and freshwater molluscs of Britain and Ireland pp 1 264 Colchester Harley Falkner G Ripken T E J Falkner M 2002 Mollusques continentaux de France Liste de reference annotee et bibliographie Paris Museum national d Histoire naturelle Bank R A Falkner G von Proschwitz T 2007 CLECOM Project a revised checklist of the non marine Mollusca of Britain and Ireland Heldia 5 41 72 Balashov Igor May 2018 Case 3685 Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Gastropoda Stylommatophora Arionidae proposed validation of the specific name as available The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 75 12 15 doi 10 21805 bzn v75 a006 ISSN 0007 5167 S2CID 90067777 Kadolsky D Welter Schultes F Bank R A 31 December 2018 Comment Case 3685 Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Gastropoda Stylommatophora Arionidae modified proposal to preserve the specific name in its accustomed sense The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 75 1 251 doi 10 21805 bzn v75 a051 S2CID 92607223 a b c Zemanova Miriam A Knop Eva Heckel Gerald November 2016 Phylogeographic past and invasive presence of Arion pest slugs in Europe Molecular Ecology 25 22 5747 5764 doi 10 1111 mec 13860 PMID 27664400 S2CID 22971610 a b c d e DAISIE European Invasive Alien Species Gateway Arion vulgaris Last updated 30 October 2006 accessed 27 September 2009 Arzumanyan M Zhamakochyan G Torosyan H Ghrmajyan A Arakelyan M Nanagulyan S Margaryan L Aghayan S Davis R Turoci A 8 April 2024 First record of Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Arionidae from Armenia Biodiversity Data Journal 12 doi 10 3897 BDJ 12 e121176 PMC 11019258 Reise H Arslangundogdu Z Schlitt B Hutchinson J M C Hizal E Bacak E 11 December 2018 First records of the terrestrial slug Arion ater s l Linnaeus 1758 Pulmonata Arionidae from Turkey Folia Malacologica 26 4 213 220 doi 10 12657 folmal 026 024 S2CID 92547139 Zemanova M A Broennimann O Guisan A Knop E Heckel G November 2018 Slimy invasion climatic niche and current and future biogeography of Arion slug invaders Diversity and Distributions 24 11 1627 1640 doi 10 1111 ddi 12789 S2CID 91013722 L Heureux E Lafond J Angers B 2023 First record of the invasive slug Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1885 Gastropoda Stylommatophora Arionidae in Quebec Canada Bioinvasions Records 12 1 136 150 doi 10 3391 bir 2023 12 1 12 Araiza Gomez V Naranjo Garcia E Zuniga G 2021 Occurrence in Mexico of two European invasive slug species Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 and Arion intermedius Norman 1852 BioInvasions Records 10 10 20 doi 10 3391 bir 2021 10 1 02 S2CID 234118330 Kraepelin K 1895 Zoologische Ergebnisse einer Fruhjahrs Exkursion nach Madeira und den Canarischen Inseln Verhandlungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins in Hamburg 2 6 17 Backhuys W 1975 Zoogeography and taxonomy of the land and freshwater molluscs of the Azores Amsterdam Backhuys and Meesters ISBN 9789004064478 Borreda V Martinez Orti A 2017 Contribution to the knowledge of the terrestrial slugs Gastropoda Pulmonata of the Maghreb Iberus 35 1 1 10 a b Should West Norfolk brace for a slime wave Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 29 September 2014 a b Giant slugs invade Lincolnshire Lincolnshire Echo Retrieved 29 September 2014 Turner H Kuiper J G J Thew N Bernasconi R Ruetschi J Wuthrich M amp Gosteli M 1998 Fauna Helvetica 2 Atlas der Mollusken der Schweiz und Liechtensteins pp 1 527 Neuchatel Cesari P 1978 Nota preliminare sulla diffusione in Italia e l esplosione demografica nel Veneto di Arion lusitanicus Mabille Lavori Societa veneziana di Scienze naturali 3 3 7 a b c d e f g h Păpureanu A M Reise H amp Varga A 2014 First records of the invasive slug Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille Gastropoda Pulmonata Arionidae in Romania Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 13 6 11 PDF Schmid G 1970 Arion lusitanicus in Deutschland Archiv fur Molluskenkunde 100 95 102 in German Reischutz P L amp Stojaspal F J 1971 Bemerkenswerte Mollusken aus Ostosterreich Remarkable Mollusks from East Austria Mitteilungen der zoologischen Gesellschaft Braunau 1 13 339 344 Risch P Backeljau T 1989 On the occurrence of Arion lusitanicus Mabille 1868 in Belgium Mollusca Pulmonata Annalen van de Koninklijke Belgische Vereniging voor Dierkunde 119 1 25 38 a b von Proschwitz T 1992 Spanska skogsnigeln Arion lusitanicus Mabille en art i snabb spridning med manniskan i Sverige Goteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum Arstryk 1992 35 42 a b Wiktor A 1996 The slugs of the former Yugoslavia Gastropoda terrestria nuda Arionidae Milacidae Limacidae Agriolimacidae Annales Zoologici 46 1 110 Anderson R 2010 The invasive pest slug Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon A lusitanicus Mabille Mollusca Arionidae confirmed for Ireland with an appeal for records The Irish Naturalists Journal 31 1 69 70 JSTOR 41419234 Kozlowski J Kozlowski R J 1 December 2011 Expansion of the invasive slug species Arion lusitanicus Mabille 1868 Gastropoda Pulmonata Stylommatophora and dangers to garden crops a literature review with some new data Folia Malacologica 19 4 249 258 doi 10 2478 v10125 011 0005 8 Hatteland B A Roth S Andersen A Kaasa K Stoa B Solhoy T 13 February 2013 Distribution and spread of the invasive slug Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon in Norway Fauna Norvegica 32 13 26 doi 10 5324 fn v32i0 1473 hdl 1956 12402 de Winter A J 1989 Arion lusitanicus Mabille in Nederland Gastropoda Pulmonata Arionidae Basteria 53 49 51 Quinteiro J Rodriguez Castro J Castillejo J Iglesias Pineiro J Rey Mendez M May 2005 Phylogeny of slug species of the genus Arion evidence of monophyly of Iberian endemics and of the existence of relict species in Pyrenean refuges Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 43 2 139 148 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 2005 00307 x in Finnish Valovirta I 2001 Tehokkaan leviamisen mestari Archived 9 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed 27 September 2009 Nikander Anniina 15 July 2021 Ne liikkuvat oisin ja syovat kaiken tappajaetanoiden maara rajahti Suomessa Iltalehti in Finnish Retrieved 16 July 2021 Dvorak L Horsak M 2003 Soucasne poznatky o plzaku Arion lusitanicus Mollusca Pulmonata v Ceske republice Casopis Slezskeho Muzea Opava A 52 67 71 Bloch Dorete 2003 Morsnigilin ella hin spanski snigilin Frodi 1 16 18 Vuksa M Djedovic S Stojnic B 2003 IPM approach to control of the slug Arion lusitanicus Mabille a new pest species in Serbia and Montenegro In Dussart GBJ ed Slugs amp snails agricultural veterinary amp environmental perspectives BCPC Symposium Proceedings No 80 Alton UK British Crop Protection Council pp 147 152 ISBN 1901396800 Ingimarsdottir M olafsson E 2005 Spanarsnigilin finnst a Islandi bvi midur Natturufraedingurin 73 75 78 Stankovic S V Stojkoska E Norris A 2006 Annotated checklist of the terrestrial gastropods Gastropoda of the Republic of Macedonia In Petkovski S ed Anniversary Proceedings 1926 2006 Eighty years of achievement by the Macedonian Museum of Natural History Skopje Macedonian Museum of Natural History pp 43 55 Gural Sverlova N V Gural R I 2011 lt reMorfologicheskie anatomicheskie i povedencheskie osobennosti sliznej iz kompleksa Arion lusitanicus Arionidae na zapade Ukrainy Morphological anatomical and behavioural peculiarities of the slugs from the Arion lusitanicus complex in Western Ukraine PDF Ruthenica in Russian 21 2 97 111 a b c Balashov I Khomenko A Kovalov V Harbar O 2018 Fast recent expansion of the Spanish slug Gastropoda Stylommatophora Arionidae across Ukraine Vestnik Zoologii 52 6 451 456 doi 10 2478 vzoo 2018 0046 S2CID 91293329 Adomaitis M Skujiene G 2016 Invazine sliuzu rusies Arion lusitanicus Mabille 1868 Mollusca Pulmonata Arionidae plitimo Lietuvoje perspektyvos Lietuvos Biologine Bukle Struktura and Apsauga 4 41 49 Palginomm M 2009 Lusitaanlane luubi all Eesti Loodus 4 Jakubane I Pilate D Dreijers E Zolovs M 2016 Distribution of Spanish slug Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille 1868 or Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Gastropoda Arionidae in Latvia Acta Biologica Universitatis Daugavpiliensis 16 2 175 180 Schikov Evgeniy V Komarov Yuriy E 10 December 2021 Detection of an invasive species Arion vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Mollusca Gastropoda Arionidae in the Republic of North Ossetia Alania Folia Malacologica 29 4 222 228 doi 10 12657 folmal 029 026 S2CID 244933127 Ostrovsky A M 2022 Novye nahodki sinantropnyh sliznej Limacus maculatus i Arion vulgaris Mollusca Gastropoda Stylommatophora v Belarusi New records of synanthropic slugs Limacus maculatus and Arion vulgaris Mollusca Gastropoda Stylommatophora in Belarus Ruthenica 32 2 93 98 doi 10 35885 ruthenica 2022 32 2 6 S2CID 248094454 Cowie R H Dillon R T Robinson D G Smith J W July 2009 Alien non marine snails and slugs of priority quarantine importance in the United States a preliminary risk assessment American Malacological Bulletin 27 1 2 113 132 doi 10 4003 006 027 0210 S2CID 54919881 a b Welter Schultes F Species summary for Arion vulgaris AnimalBase SUB Gottingen Retrieved 8 November 2021 a b Rowson B Turner J Anderson R Symondson B 2014 Slugs of Britain amp Ireland identification understanding and control First ed Telford Field Stidies Council ISBN 9781908819130 a b c Reise H Schwarzer A K Hutchinson J M C Schlitt B 2020 Genital morphology differentiates three subspecies of the terrestrial slug Arion ater Linnaeus 1758 s l and reveals a continuum of intermediates with the invasive A vulgaris Moquin Tandon 1855 Folia Malacologica 28 1 1 34 doi 10 12657 folmal 028 001 S2CID 216497215 a b c Kozlowski J 2007 The distribution biology population dynamics and harmfulness of Arion lusitanicus Mabille 1868 Gastropoda Pulmonata Arionidae in Poland PDF Journal of Plant Protection Research 47 219 230 a b Grimm B Schaumberger K August 2002 Daily activity of the pest slug Arion lusitanicus under laboratory conditions Annals of Applied Biology 141 1 35 44 doi 10 1111 j 1744 7348 2002 tb00193 x Slotsbo S Hansen L Holmstrup M February 2011 Low temperature survival in different life stages of the Iberian slug Arion lusitanicus Cryobiology 62 1 68 73 doi 10 1016 j cryobiol 2010 12 005 PMID 21168402 Killer slugs and other aliens Europe s biodiversity is disappearing at an alarming rate European Environment Agency Retrieved 21 November 2022 Hagnell J von Proschwitz T Schander C 2006 Self fertilising observed in the invasive Iberian slug Arion lusitanicus Mabille 1868 Journal of Conchology 39 107 Dreijers E Reise H Hutchinson J M C 2013 Mating of the slugs Arion lusitanicus auct non Mabille and A rufus L different genitalia and mating behaviours are incomplete barriers to interspecific sperm exchange Journal of Molluscan Studies 79 1 51 63 doi 10 1093 mollus eys033 a b Zemanova M A Knop E Heckel G 2017 Introgressive replacement of natives by invading Arion pest slugs Scientific Reports 7 1 14908 Bibcode 2017NatSR 714908Z doi 10 1038 s41598 017 14619 y PMC 5668256 PMID 29097725 a b Hutchinson J M C Schlitt B Reise H 6 September 2021 One town s invasion by the pest slug Arion vulgaris Gastropoda Arionidae microsatellites reveal little introgression from Arion ater and limited gene flow between infraspecific races in both species Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 134 4 835 850 doi 10 1093 biolinnean blab082 Hagnell J Schander C von Proschwitz T 2003 Hybridisation of arionids the rise of a super slug In Dussart GBJ ed Slugs amp snails agricultural veterinary and environmental perspectives Symposium Proceedings No 80 Alton UK British Crop Protection Council pp 221 226 Blattmann T Boch S Turke M Knop E 25 September 2013 Gastropod Seed Dispersal An Invasive Slug Destroys Far More Seeds in Its Gut than Native Gastropods PLOS ONE 8 9 e75243 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 875243B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0075243 PMC 3783466 PMID 24086477 von Proschwitz T 1997 Utbredning och spridning av spansk skogssnigel Arion lusitanicus Mabille och rod skogssnigel Arion rufus L en oversikt av utvecklingen i Sverigerige Goteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum Arstryck Goteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum Arstryck 1996 27 45 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arion vulgaris Arion vulgaris at Animalbase taxonomy short description distribution biology status threats images Arion vulgaris images at Encyclopedia of Life Slug controls on Wikibooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spanish slug amp oldid 1220167903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.