Tag Archives: snail

Stowaways in potted plants

Potted plants can seem so benign. Beautiful, fascinating, good to grow and give, but they may carry invasive species which are not benign. Tom Bawden at The Independent tells us about invasive species reaching Europe, including the New Guinea flatworm … Continue reading

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A new invader to eat rice plants?

The Non-Native Species Secretariat (NNSS) for Britain doesn’t list apple snails (Pomacea canaliculata and P. maculata) as invasive species, but perhaps it should. Apple snails are aquatic. They spread when there’s flooding, when they cling onto larger animals or onto … Continue reading

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Acidity threatens ocean’s food chain

Lina Hansson at the European Project on OCean Acidification (EPOCA) tells us about recent science by the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and other institutions. Those scientists’ findings are about tiny snails called sea butterflies. The findings illustrate how increased carbon … Continue reading

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Lovely weather… for slugs

Our wet summer in Britain has led to increases in slug and snail populations. We British (or was it the English?) have been called ‘a nation of gardeners’ as well as one or two less flattering descriptions. It’s true: gardens … Continue reading

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