Abstract

The slugs of Britain and Ireland form a well-studied fauna of economic importance. They include many widespread European species that are introduced elsewhere (at least half of the 36 currently recorded British species are established in North America, for example). To test the contention that the British and Irish fauna consists of 36 species, and to verify the identity of each, a species delimitation study was conducted based on a geographically wide survey. Comparisons between mitochondrial DNA (COI, 16S), nuclear DNA (ITS-1) and morphology were investigated with reference to interspecific hybridisation. Species delimitation of the fauna produced a primary species hypothesis of 47 putative species. This was refined to a secondary species hypothesis of 44 species by integration with morphological and other data. Thirty six of these correspond to the known fauna (two species in Arion subgenus Carinarion were scarcely distinct and Arion (Mesarion) subfuscus consisted of two near-cryptic species). However, by the same criteria a further eight previously undetected species (22% of the fauna) are established in Britain and/or Ireland. Although overlooked, none are strictly morphologically cryptic, and some appear previously undescribed. Most of the additional species are probably accidentally introduced, and several are already widespread in Britain and Ireland (and thus perhaps elsewhere). At least three may be plant pests. Some evidence was found for interspecific hybridisation among the large Arion species (although not involving A. flagellus) and more unexpectedly in species pairs in Deroceras (Agriolimacidae) and Limacus (Limacidae). In the latter groups, introgression appears to have occurred in one direction only, with recently-invading lineages becoming common at the expense of long-established or native ones. The results show how even a well-studied, macroscopic fauna can be vulnerable to cryptic and undetected invasions and changes.

Highlights

  • Slugs are among the invertebrates most readily encountered by people in north-west Europe, with many species occurring in gardens and in or around buildings

  • This study demonstrates how a simple, geographically extensive yet morphologically informed approach to DNA sampling can be effective in screening a fauna for additional taxa and other changes resulting from past invasions

  • The proportion (22%) of additional species revealed is remarkably high compared to other recent studies and given the long history of study of this fauna

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Summary

Introduction

Slugs are among the invertebrates most readily encountered by people in north-west Europe, with many species occurring in gardens and in or around buildings. The British and Irish slug fauna of 36 species [1] includes important pests, post-glacial relicts, indicators of ancient woodland and even putative endemics [2]. Almost all the introduced slugs of other temperate regions occur in Britain, including those of South Africa (11 species [3]) and New Zealand (14 species [4]). At least 18 species (half the currently recognised British fauna) are established in the USA and/or Canada [5,6,7]. Some of these species have a long history of study. The British and Irish slug fauna must rank among the world’s best studied

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