Abstract

Populations of Ilyanassa obsoleta, a snail abundant in estuaries along the Atlantic coast of North America, exhibit much unobvious spatial heterogeneity. Lifetime dispersal of snails stands to be great, as they live for decades and can make daily moves of tens of meters. They could distribute uniformly, but in many populations there are characteristic spatial distributions of differently sized and trematode-infected snails. This is the case where this work was done in the Savages Ditch habitat of Rehoboth Bay, Delaware, U.S.A.. The study was designed to explain how the spatial heterogeneity in that habitat arises as a consequence of snail movements. Individually marked snails were tested for trematode infections and released from five well-separated positions. Snails released from each position were in three groups: (1) natives, collected from the position area, and (2) large and (3) small “outlanders”, collected from a site in the habitat that was separated from all release positions, had enhanced tidal currents, and where both size classes were available. Locations of found, released snails were noted for up to four years. Depending on collection site, many native snails were parasitized. In any case, they always tended to disperse in the vicinity where initially collected. Large outlanders (∼ 21% infected) dispersed variably, moving back toward their source area from certain release positions, but not from others. Small outlanders (∼ 4% infected), almost regardless of where released, tended to disperse back toward their source area. Dispersals of these snail groups from the five release positions explains much about how the pattern of spatial heterogeneity seen in the habitat arises.

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