Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU

Abstract EFSA requested the PLH Panel to review the current state of the art of the biology and ecology of apple snails, reported in this opinion, and to perform an environmental risk assessment for validation of the Plant Health environment guidance document, which will be provided in a second opin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2013-12-01
Series:EFSA Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2013.3487
id doaj-ff4db675333349d2a96836fafae78937
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ff4db675333349d2a96836fafae789372021-05-02T06:21:23ZengWileyEFSA Journal1831-47322013-12-011112n/an/a10.2903/j.efsa.2013.3487EFSA Journal 2013;11(12):3487Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EUEFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)Abstract EFSA requested the PLH Panel to review the current state of the art of the biology and ecology of apple snails, reported in this opinion, and to perform an environmental risk assessment for validation of the Plant Health environment guidance document, which will be provided in a second opinion. The Panel presents in this opinion the current state of the art of the biology of apple snails, and develops and uses a population dynamics model to assess the potential establishment of apple snails in the EU. A thorough review of the literature on the biology of Pomacea canaliculata and P. maculata was performed to collect information and data on life history characteristics related to temperature, which was used in the population dynamics model. Although uncertainties on the systematics and taxonomy of the genus Pomacea remain, it is now acknowledged that Pomacea insularum is a synonym of P. maculata and can be undoubtedly differentiated from P. canaliculata. Natural spread occurs via rivers and canals, in which the snails crawl, drift, float and raft. Flooding increases spread. In addition, attachment to animals (e.g. birds, cattle, horses, deer and aquatic invertebrates) results in spread. Human assistance results in spread through cultivation transport of rice seedlings, aquaculture, aquaria, boats, and agricultural field machinery. The potential distribution of P. canaliculata in Europe was obtained by calculating with the population dynamics model, the average snail abundance per year in each node of a grid of 0.25 × 0.25 degrees covering Europe, which resulted in the following conclusions: (1) the area of potential establishment comprises wetlands of southern Europe (i.e. Spain, southern France, most of Italy and Greece) and the Balkans up to the latitude of the Danube river, (2) the potential area of establishment includes the rice production areas in Europe.https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2013.3487apple snailPomacea insularumPomacea canaliculataPomacea maculatapopulation dynamics modelestablishment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)
spellingShingle EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)
Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
EFSA Journal
apple snail
Pomacea insularum
Pomacea canaliculata
Pomacea maculata
population dynamics model
establishment
author_facet EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)
author_sort EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH)
title Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
title_short Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
title_full Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
title_fullStr Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
title_full_unstemmed Scientific Opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the EU
title_sort scientific opinion on the assessment of the potential establishment of the apple snail in the eu
publisher Wiley
series EFSA Journal
issn 1831-4732
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Abstract EFSA requested the PLH Panel to review the current state of the art of the biology and ecology of apple snails, reported in this opinion, and to perform an environmental risk assessment for validation of the Plant Health environment guidance document, which will be provided in a second opinion. The Panel presents in this opinion the current state of the art of the biology of apple snails, and develops and uses a population dynamics model to assess the potential establishment of apple snails in the EU. A thorough review of the literature on the biology of Pomacea canaliculata and P. maculata was performed to collect information and data on life history characteristics related to temperature, which was used in the population dynamics model. Although uncertainties on the systematics and taxonomy of the genus Pomacea remain, it is now acknowledged that Pomacea insularum is a synonym of P. maculata and can be undoubtedly differentiated from P. canaliculata. Natural spread occurs via rivers and canals, in which the snails crawl, drift, float and raft. Flooding increases spread. In addition, attachment to animals (e.g. birds, cattle, horses, deer and aquatic invertebrates) results in spread. Human assistance results in spread through cultivation transport of rice seedlings, aquaculture, aquaria, boats, and agricultural field machinery. The potential distribution of P. canaliculata in Europe was obtained by calculating with the population dynamics model, the average snail abundance per year in each node of a grid of 0.25 × 0.25 degrees covering Europe, which resulted in the following conclusions: (1) the area of potential establishment comprises wetlands of southern Europe (i.e. Spain, southern France, most of Italy and Greece) and the Balkans up to the latitude of the Danube river, (2) the potential area of establishment includes the rice production areas in Europe.
topic apple snail
Pomacea insularum
Pomacea canaliculata
Pomacea maculata
population dynamics model
establishment
url https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2013.3487
work_keys_str_mv AT efsapanelonplanthealthplh scientificopinionontheassessmentofthepotentialestablishmentoftheapplesnailintheeu
_version_ 1721494494956748800