Rat-sized
stucco-eating snails invade Florida
In
Carribean countries, the giant snails blow out tires when hit on the
highway and coat walls and pavement with slime and excrement.
Florida's last infestation occurred in 1966 and took $1 million and
10 years to defeat.
16 April, 2013
ORLANDO,
Fla. — South Florida is fighting a growing infestation of one of
the world's most destructive invasive species: the giant African land
snail, which can grow as big as a rat and gnaw through stucco and
plaster.
More
than 1,000 of the mollusks are being caught each week in Miami-Dade
and 117,000 in total since the first snail was spotted by a homeowner
in September 2011, said Denise Feiber, a spokeswoman for the Florida
Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
Residents
will soon likely begin encountering them more often, crunching them
underfoot as the snails emerge from underground hibernation at the
start of the state's rainy season in just seven weeks, Feiber said.
The
snails attack "over 500 known species of plants ... pretty much
anything that's in their path and green," Feiber said.
In
some Caribbean countries, such as Barbados, which are overrun with
the creatures, the snails' shells blow out tires on the highway and
turn into hurling projectiles from lawnmower blades, while their
slime and excrement coat walls and pavement.
"It
becomes a slick mess," Feiber said.
A
typical snail can produce about 1,200 eggs a year and the creatures
are a particular pest in homes because of their fondness for stucco,
devoured for the calcium content they need for their shells.
The
snails also carry a parasitic rat lungworm that can cause illness in
humans, including a form of meningitis, Feiber said, although no such
cases have yet been identified in the United States.
EXOTIC
INVASION
The
snails' saga is something of a sequel to the Florida horror show of
exotic species invasions, including the well-known infestation of
giant Burmese pythons, which became established in the Everglades in
2000. There is a long list of destructive non-native species that
thrive in the state's moist, subtropical climate.
Experts
gathered last week in Gainesville, Fla., for a Giant African Land
Snail Science Symposium, to seek the best ways to eradicate the
mollusks, including use of a stronger bait approved recently by the
federal government.
Feiber
said investigators were trying to trace the snail infestation source.
One possibility being examined is a Miami Santeria group, a religion
with West African and Caribbean roots, which was found in 2010 to be
using the large snails in its rituals, she said. But many exotic
species come into the United States unintentionally in freight or
tourists' baggage.
"If
you got a ham sandwich in Jamaica or the Dominican Republic, or an
orange, and you didn't eat it all and you bring it back into the
States and then you discard it, at some point, things can emerge from
those products," Feiber said.
Authorities
are expanding a series of announcements on buses, billboards and in
movie theaters urging the public to be on the lookout.
The
last known Florida invasion of the giant mollusks occurred in 1966,
when a boy returning to Miami from a vacation in Hawaii brought back
three of them, possibly in his jacket pockets. His grandmother
eventually released the snails into her garden where the population
grew in seven years to 17,000 snails. The state spent $1 million and
10 years eradicating them.
Feiber
said many people unfamiliar with the danger viewed the snails as cute
pets.
"They're
huge, they move around, they look like they're looking at you ...
communicating with you, and people enjoy them for that," Feiber
said. "But they don't realize the devastation they can create if
they are released into the environment where they don't have any
natural enemies and they thrive."
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