Lord Howe flax snail

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Lord Howe flax snail

Critically Endangered  (IUCN 2.3)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Order: Stylommatophora
Family: Bothriembryontidae
Subfamily: Placostylinae
Genus: Placostylus
Species:
P. bivaricosus
Binomial name
Placostylus bivaricosus
(Gaskoin, 1855)
P. bivaricosus is endemic to Lord Howe Island
Synonyms
  • Bulimus (Eurytus) etheridgei Brazier, 1889 (junior synonym)
  • Bulimus (Placostylus) cuniculinsulae Cox, 1872 (junior synonym)
  • Bulimus bivaricosus Gaskoin, 1855 (original combination)
  • Bulimus bivaricosus etheridgei Hedley, 1891 (junior synonym)
  • Placostylus (Maoristylus) bivaricosus (Gaskoin, 1855)
  • Placostylus bivaricosus belli Iredale, 1944 (junior synonym)
  • Placostylus bivaricosus royi Iredale, 1944 (junior synonym)
  • Placostylus cuniculinsulae (Cox, 1872) (junior synonym)
  • Placostylus gizoensis Clench, 1941 (junior synonym)

The Lord Howe flax snail or the Lord Howe placostylus,

gastropod mollusc in the family Bothriembryontidae. [2]

Distribution

This large snail is found only on

endangered since rats were accidentally introduced to this World Heritage island
in 1918.

Subspecies

Subspecies of Placostylus bivaricosus include:

Description

The genus Placostylus is a group of large ground dwelling gastropods with a disjunct distribution in the South west Pacific from the Solomon Islands, Fiji, and New Caledonia, to Lord Howe Island and the northern extremity of New Zealand. The Lord Howe flax snail has a brown, pointed shell up to 7 cm long and 2 cm in diameter.

Conservation

Species decline

Historical accounts and fossil evidence indicate that the Lord Howe Island flax snail was formerly widespread and abundant on the island. The decline was first noted in the 1940s and the species is now listed as critically endangered.

The

European blackbirds and song thrushes
(self-introduced around 1950) are also thought to be predators of the snail.

Habitat clearing and modification and habitat disturbance, possibly herbicides and pesticides also add to the species decline.

Recovery

In 2001, a recovery plan was completed to protect and recover the Lord Howe Island flax snail in the wild. Actions include habitat and population surveys, community awareness raising and a captive-breeding program.

The Lord Howe Island Board, responsible for implementation of the recovery plan, has since constructed a rodent and bird proof enclosure for the project and the first generation of captive bred Lord Howe Island land snails has hatched.

Over a period of two years, schoolchildren will closely monitor the captive snail population and their eggs, and will then measure growth rates and survival rates of the juvenile snails.

Rodent control or eradication on the island is crucial for the long-term survival of this snail in the wild.

References

External links

 Data related to Placostylus bivaricosus at Wikispecies