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Background: Species-rich semi-natural grasslands are impacted by the severe land-use changes that are affecting mountain regions, compromising their high biodiversity value. In particular, sprinkler irrigation and increased fertilisation stimulate vegetation growth, modifying and homogenising habitat conditions for ground-dwelling invertebrates. Among them, land snails have been largely understudied despite their commonness and vulnerability to small-scale habitat alteration. This study investigated the mid- and long-term responses of land snail communities to management intensification of montane and subalpine hay meadows. Mid-term effects were studied using a randomised block design experiment, mimicking an intensification gradient with different levels of irrigation and fertilisation applied during 5 years. Long-term effects were examined relying on an observational approach that consisted in comparing snail communities in meadows managed intensively for > 20 years with those from the 5-year experimental module.
Results: We show that management intensification initially boosts snail densities, but erodes species richness by - 35% in intensively-managed meadows in the long term. Contrary to our expectations, drought-tolerant (xerophilous) snails benefitted from grassland intensification, whereas mesophilous species accounted for most species losses due to intensification in the long run, indicating that the latter may be especially sensitive to the hostile microclimate conditions abruptly prevailing in a meadow after mowing. Soil pH was also a principal determinant of land snail occurrence, with almost no specimen recorded in acidic meadows (pH < 5.5), while plant diversity favoured overall snail abundance.
Conclusions: Despite the fact that xerophilous snails appear tolerant to management intensification, we found that several drought-sensitive species are lost in the long term. We conclude that the preservation of species-rich land snail communities in mountain hay meadows requires the conservation and restoration of low-input grasslands on basic soils for preventing further species losses of gastropod fauna.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12862-022-01972-4 | DOI Listing |
Unlabelled: , the greater Bermuda land snail, is a critically endangered species and one of only two extant members in its genus. These snails are one of Bermuda's few endemic animal clades and their rich fossil record was the basis for the punctuated equilibria model of speciation. Once thought extinct, recent conservation efforts have focused on the recovery of the species, yet no genomic information or other molecular sequences have been available to inform these initiatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
September 2025
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, CZ-61137 Brno, Czechia.
The remarkable phenotypic plasticity of land snail shells often results in convergent evolution, leading to frequent taxonomic misidentifications and non-monophyletic classifications. The taxonomy of the Holarctic micro land snails related to Euconulus fulvus has been particularly challenging to resolve. This study integrates mitochondrial and nuclear DNA phylogenetics, geometric morphometrics, and climate suitability modeling to clarify the phylogenetic and taxonomic status of an East Asian lineage within this group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZookeys
August 2025
Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change, Zoological Museum, Hamburg, Germany Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change Hamburg Germany.
Greece is home to numerous endemic land snail species, sometimes with highly restricted distributions. Several species of , representing all three subgenera, live there. Although the genus was taxonomically revised in 2014, there remained some open questions and the distribution ranges of individual species are still incompletely known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
August 2025
Biology Program, Faculty of Science, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan.
Recent studies have shown the significant role of introgression in evolution, yet the confident evidence of introgression has come from biased taxa. Although the Mollusca were representative taxa to show introgression-driven evolution, conclusive examination has been rare. Here, we investigated the genetic structure and evolutionary history of terrestrial snails in the Euhadra peliomphala species complex (Heterobranchia: Camaenidae).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
August 2025
School of Geography and the Environment, and St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QY, United Kingdom.
We present the first synthesis of all known terrestrial endemic species extinctions in the biogeographical region of Macaronesia, covering all archipelagos (Azores, Madeira, Selvagens, the Canaries, and Cabo Verde) and multiple taxa (arthropods, birds, bryophytes, fungi, land molluscs, lichens, mammals, reptiles, and vascular plants). This list also includes information on the original distribution of extinct species, extinction chronologies, and likely causes of extinction, as reported by the original works' authors. Our survey identified 220 extinction records, with the highest numbers observed among land snails (111 species), arthropods (55), birds (27), and reptiles (15).
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