Abstract

Land and freshwater molluscs are the most abundant non-arthropod invertebrates from inland habitats worldwide, playing important ecological roles and some being important pests in agriculture. However, despite their ecological, and even economic and sanitary importance, their local diversity in many European regions is not perfectly understood, with a particularly notableknowledge gap in the northern Iberian malacofauna. This work aims at providing a revised checklist of continental gastropods and bivalves from the Asturias (northern Spain), based on the examination of newly collected and deposited material and on the critical analysis of published and gray literature. A total of 165 molluscan species are recognized. Ten species constitute new records from Asturias and seven from northern Iberian Peninsula. Seventeen species are introduced or invasive, evidencing the current increase of the bioinvasion rate in continental molluscs. Furthermore, all these exotic species are parasite transmitters or trematode intermediate hosts, and thus represent a potential bio-sanitary risk for human and other animal health. The provided data strongly suggest that the increase of invasive freshwater snail species can lead to an increase in parasitic infections, and this is a crucial point that transcends the merely scientific to the political-social sphere.

Highlights

  • IntroductionLand and freshwater snails and slugs are mostly heterobranch gastropods (except for some operculate snails that are caenogastropods) inhabiting many different inland habitats worldwide

  • Land and freshwater snails and slugs are mostly heterobranch gastropods inhabiting many different inland habitats worldwide

  • The provided data strongly suggest that the increase of invasive freshwater snail species can lead to an increase in parasitic infections, and this is a crucial point that transcends the merely scientific to the political-social sphere

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Summary

Introduction

Land and freshwater snails and slugs are mostly heterobranch gastropods (except for some operculate snails that are caenogastropods) inhabiting many different inland habitats worldwide. Overall continental gastropods and bivalves play important ecological roles as prey for many species of birds and small mammals, predators of other invertebrates or as scavengers or filter-feeding organisms. They have attracted attention in the last decade for its surprising and unknown diversity [1–5] and for other aspects, from being indicators of climate change and evolutionary responses (e.g., Cepaea nemoralis) to a sentinel species of wetlands, ponds, and streams environmental quality [6,7]. Some species of land snails and slugs eat plants, including vegetables, fruits and garden flowers and they can destroy young plants, ruin crops and constitute an important pest in many countries [8,9].

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