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A new alien snail Ampullaceana balthica for the Canadian fauna, with an overview of Transatlantic malacofaunal exchange in the Anthropocene. / Vinarski, Maxim V.; Aksenova, Olga V.; Bolotov, Ivan N.; Kondakov, Alexander V.; Khrebtova, Irina S.; Gofarov, Mikhail Yu; Schindler, Michael; Zuykov, Michael.

в: Aquatic Invasions, Том 17, № 1, 03.2022, стр. 21-35.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

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Author

Vinarski, Maxim V. ; Aksenova, Olga V. ; Bolotov, Ivan N. ; Kondakov, Alexander V. ; Khrebtova, Irina S. ; Gofarov, Mikhail Yu ; Schindler, Michael ; Zuykov, Michael. / A new alien snail Ampullaceana balthica for the Canadian fauna, with an overview of Transatlantic malacofaunal exchange in the Anthropocene. в: Aquatic Invasions. 2022 ; Том 17, № 1. стр. 21-35.

BibTeX

@article{5bc7908e36384cc48c91c57d2a77dc6b,
title = "A new alien snail Ampullaceana balthica for the Canadian fauna, with an overview of Transatlantic malacofaunal exchange in the Anthropocene",
abstract = "A survey of the exchange of freshwater gastropods mollusks between Europe and North America is provided. Several dozen species of snails migrated, during the last two centuries, in either direction across North Atlantic and this process is ongoing. The intensity of the faunal exchange is unequal since much more snail species have dispersed from North America to Europe than in the opposite direction. Two cases of “failed” invasions of North American lymnaeid snails to Europe are discussed. A species of pulmonate snails, Ampullaceana balthica (Linnaeus, 1758), is reported here as new for the malacofauna of Canada (and for the whole North America). This snail of European origin was found in June 2019 in a small lake in the vicinities of Rimouski Town (Qu{\'e}bec, Canada). The taxonomic identification of the mollusks was confirmed by molecular analysis, with the studied specimens having two unique COI haplotypes, hitherto not found in Europe.",
keywords = "Biological invasion, Faunal exchange, Freshwater Gastropoda, Invasive snails, Qu{\'e}bec, GASTROPODA LYMNAEIDAE, Quebec, invasive snails, RECORD, DISPERSAL, freshwater Gastropoda, TAXONOMY, faunal exchange, MOLLUSCA, biological invasion, LAND SNAILS, ACUTA DRAPARNAUD, RADIX-BALTHICA, BRITAIN",
author = "Vinarski, {Maxim V.} and Aksenova, {Olga V.} and Bolotov, {Ivan N.} and Kondakov, {Alexander V.} and Khrebtova, {Irina S.} and Gofarov, {Mikhail Yu} and Michael Schindler and Michael Zuykov",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Vinarski et al.",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
doi = "10.3391/ai.2022.17.1.02",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "21--35",
journal = "Aquatic Invasions",
issn = "1798-6540",
publisher = "Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A new alien snail Ampullaceana balthica for the Canadian fauna, with an overview of Transatlantic malacofaunal exchange in the Anthropocene

AU - Vinarski, Maxim V.

AU - Aksenova, Olga V.

AU - Bolotov, Ivan N.

AU - Kondakov, Alexander V.

AU - Khrebtova, Irina S.

AU - Gofarov, Mikhail Yu

AU - Schindler, Michael

AU - Zuykov, Michael

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © Vinarski et al.

PY - 2022/3

Y1 - 2022/3

N2 - A survey of the exchange of freshwater gastropods mollusks between Europe and North America is provided. Several dozen species of snails migrated, during the last two centuries, in either direction across North Atlantic and this process is ongoing. The intensity of the faunal exchange is unequal since much more snail species have dispersed from North America to Europe than in the opposite direction. Two cases of “failed” invasions of North American lymnaeid snails to Europe are discussed. A species of pulmonate snails, Ampullaceana balthica (Linnaeus, 1758), is reported here as new for the malacofauna of Canada (and for the whole North America). This snail of European origin was found in June 2019 in a small lake in the vicinities of Rimouski Town (Québec, Canada). The taxonomic identification of the mollusks was confirmed by molecular analysis, with the studied specimens having two unique COI haplotypes, hitherto not found in Europe.

AB - A survey of the exchange of freshwater gastropods mollusks between Europe and North America is provided. Several dozen species of snails migrated, during the last two centuries, in either direction across North Atlantic and this process is ongoing. The intensity of the faunal exchange is unequal since much more snail species have dispersed from North America to Europe than in the opposite direction. Two cases of “failed” invasions of North American lymnaeid snails to Europe are discussed. A species of pulmonate snails, Ampullaceana balthica (Linnaeus, 1758), is reported here as new for the malacofauna of Canada (and for the whole North America). This snail of European origin was found in June 2019 in a small lake in the vicinities of Rimouski Town (Québec, Canada). The taxonomic identification of the mollusks was confirmed by molecular analysis, with the studied specimens having two unique COI haplotypes, hitherto not found in Europe.

KW - Biological invasion

KW - Faunal exchange

KW - Freshwater Gastropoda

KW - Invasive snails

KW - Québec

KW - GASTROPODA LYMNAEIDAE

KW - Quebec

KW - invasive snails

KW - RECORD

KW - DISPERSAL

KW - freshwater Gastropoda

KW - TAXONOMY

KW - faunal exchange

KW - MOLLUSCA

KW - biological invasion

KW - LAND SNAILS

KW - ACUTA DRAPARNAUD

KW - RADIX-BALTHICA

KW - BRITAIN

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126583990&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/ba7ea7ed-6c89-3564-b425-d446896a463a/

U2 - 10.3391/ai.2022.17.1.02

DO - 10.3391/ai.2022.17.1.02

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85126583990

VL - 17

SP - 21

EP - 35

JO - Aquatic Invasions

JF - Aquatic Invasions

SN - 1798-6540

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 93751870