Difference between revisions of "Pomacea canaliculata"

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[[File:Pomacea canaliculata eggs on Pistia stratiotes.jpg|250px|thumb|''Pomacea canaliculata'' egg batches (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Author(s): Shan Lv, National Institute of Parasitic Diseases<br/>Source: [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pomacea_canaliculata_eggs_on_Pistia_stratiotes.jpg Wikimedia Commons]]]
 
[[File:Pomacea canaliculata eggs on Pistia stratiotes.jpg|250px|thumb|''Pomacea canaliculata'' egg batches (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Author(s): Shan Lv, National Institute of Parasitic Diseases<br/>Source: [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pomacea_canaliculata_eggs_on_Pistia_stratiotes.jpg Wikimedia Commons]]]
 
<font color="#800000">'''''Pomacea canaliculata'''''</font> (Lamarck, 1828) - (golden apple snail)<br/>
 
<font color="#800000">'''''Pomacea canaliculata'''''</font> (Lamarck, 1828) - (golden apple snail)<br/>
This is a large water snail, native to South America, which has been introduced as a food into Asia in the 1980s and has become a serious pest of paddy rice. The snail is highly polyphagous and feeds on any type of plant material, including crops like rice and taro. It is also a vector of the rat lungworm ''Angiostrongylus cantonensis'' that causes human eosinophilic meningitis. The snail is used as food in Asia and sometimes eaten uncooked.
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This is a large water (or amphibious) snail, native to South America, which has been introduced as a food into Asia in the 1980s and has become a serious pest of paddy rice. The snail is highly polyphagous and feeds on any type of plant material, including crops like rice and taro. It is also a vector of the rat lungworm ''Angiostrongylus cantonensis'' that causes human eosinophilic meningitis. The snail is used as food in Asia and sometimes eaten uncooked.
  
The eggs are laid outside the water and are brightly coloured, apparently a warning colour for potential predators. The shell is almost spherical and grows up to 15 cm in diameter. This species has been misidentified in some literature, e.g. as ''Pomacea lineata.''
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The normal life span is about 4 years. The eggs are laid in clutches of 200-600 outside the water and are brightly coloured, apparently as a warning for potential predators. The shell is almost spherical and usually grows up to 4-6 cm in diameter (specimens up to 15 cm have been also recorded). This species has been misidentified in some literature, e.g. as ''Pomacea lineata.''
  
 
<gallery widths=200px caption="Other images of Pomacea canaliculata (IPM Images, PaDIL and Wikimedia Commons - click to enlarge)">
 
<gallery widths=200px caption="Other images of Pomacea canaliculata (IPM Images, PaDIL and Wikimedia Commons - click to enlarge)">

Revision as of 18:24, 29 August 2014

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Pomacea canaliculata egg batches (click on image to enlarge it)
Author(s): Shan Lv, National Institute of Parasitic Diseases
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Pomacea canaliculata (Lamarck, 1828) - (golden apple snail)
This is a large water (or amphibious) snail, native to South America, which has been introduced as a food into Asia in the 1980s and has become a serious pest of paddy rice. The snail is highly polyphagous and feeds on any type of plant material, including crops like rice and taro. It is also a vector of the rat lungworm Angiostrongylus cantonensis that causes human eosinophilic meningitis. The snail is used as food in Asia and sometimes eaten uncooked.

The normal life span is about 4 years. The eggs are laid in clutches of 200-600 outside the water and are brightly coloured, apparently as a warning for potential predators. The shell is almost spherical and usually grows up to 4-6 cm in diameter (specimens up to 15 cm have been also recorded). This species has been misidentified in some literature, e.g. as Pomacea lineata.