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Identification problems of travelling snail species - new exotic introductions to tropical greenhouses in Gothenburg, Sweden (Gastropoda: Achatinellidae, Strobilopsidae, Helicarionidae)
Richling, I.; Proschwitz, T.v. (2021). Identification problems of travelling snail species - new exotic introductions to tropical greenhouses in Gothenburg, Sweden (Gastropoda: Achatinellidae, Strobilopsidae, Helicarionidae). PeerJ 9: e11185. https://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11185
In: PeerJ. PeerJ: Corte Madera & London. e-ISSN 2167-8359, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Discostrobilops hubbardi (A. D. Brown, 1861) [WoRMS]; Gastropoda [WoRMS]; Helicarionidae Bourguignat, 1877 [WoRMS]; Mollusca [WoRMS]; Ovachlamys fulgens (Gude, 1900) [WoRMS]; Tornatellides boeningi (Schmacker & O. Boettger, 1891) [WoRMS]
Author keywords
    Introduced species, Greenhouses,Tornatellides cf. boeningi, Discostrobilops hubbardi, Ovachlamys fulgens, Horticultural trade, Identification, Snails, Mollusca, CO

Authors  Top 
  • Richling, I.
  • von Proschwitz, T.

Abstract
    Three previously unreported species of tropical land snails were found in the greenhouses of the Gothenburg (Göteborg) Botanical Garden and the Public Science Center Universeum in Gothenburg. For Tornatellides cf. boeningi (Schmacker & Boettger, 1891) and Ovachlamys fulgens (Gude, 1900) this is the first observed occurrence in a European greenhouse, while Discostrobilops hubbardi (Brown, 1861) was first reported very recently in the Vienna Botanical garden. Tornatellides and Discostrobilops seem to be spread with orchid culture and trade. Identification of the Tornatellides species proved extremely difficult and a genetic sequence-based approach completely failed due to the unavailability of reference data. This was unexpected considering the importance of these introduced species in horticultural trade. A broader assessment of available sequence data for genetic identification based on COI or 16S for other snail species reported from horticultural facilities showed that such reference data in GenBank are still scarce and only for a limited number of species this approach would support identification.

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