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Limited value of the common periwinkle snail Littorina littorea as a biological control for the invasive tunicate Didemnum vexillum

16

Citations

7

References

2009

Year

Abstract

Didemnum vexillum is an invasive tunicate that aggressively grows on and fouls all manner of substrates in coastal New England habitats. Most alarmingly, D. vexillum acts as a shellfish pest and is capable of completely encapsulating and smothering bivalves, causing them to have reduced growth or be killed. Fouling by D. vexillum on aquaculture gear and product requires remediation. While there are numerous manual eradication methods, they are labor intensive and expensive. We investigated whether the common periwinkle snail Littorina littorea can be utilized as a biological control for D. vexillum. The only known predator of senescing D. vexillum is the snail L. littorea and there are no known predators of healthy D. vexillum. Field observations indicated that L. littorea may be consuming, scouring, or otherwise removing stressed D. vexillum from rocks in intertidal pools at Sandwich, Massachusetts, during all seasons. We used two methods to investigate whether L. littorea could be used as a biological control by either consuming or scouring D. vexillum off shellfish. We examined L. littorea’s fecal pellets and conducted a laboratory experiment to determine if the snails would “clean” unhealthy D. vexillum from aquaculture product. Fecal pellets from L. littorea collected on unhealthy D. vexillum contained the characteristic spicules of this tunicate, thus confirming that L. littorea consumes D. vexillum under field conditions. The laboratory experiment indicated that L. littorea did not notably consume or scour D. vexillum from shellfish under the conditions we provided. At this time, we recommend that manual eradication methods be considered the primary defense for shellfish aquaculturists and others interested in controlling D. vexillum and that L. littorea should merely be considered as a supplement to these more reliable control methods.

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