Publication | Open Access
Medium-sized forest snails survive passage through birds' digestive tract and adhere strongly to birds' legs: more evidence for passive dispersal mechanisms
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Citations
26
References
2016
Year
BiologyForagingMore EvidencePedal AdhesionNatural SciencesPredator-prey InteractionEvolutionary BiologyAvian LocomotionIntraguild PredationTerrestrial CrustaceanC. LaminataDigestive TractPassive Dispersal MechanismsLand Snails
It is well known that land snails can be dispersed by birds, both by attachment to the body (ectozoochory) and by passing intact and alive through the bird's digestive tract (endozoochory). Endozoochory has, however, only been recorded for very small species. We examined the possibility that larger species (up to c. 17 mm in maximum shell dimension) could survive passage through a bird's digestive system. Live Alinda biplicata, Cochlodina laminata (both Clausiliidae) and Discus rotundatus (Discidae) were fed to 10 bird species (Corvidae, Turdidae, Sturnidae and Columbidae) in 14 experimental trials. Of 720 snails offered, 14 passed intact through the birds, of which nine were alive (eight clausiliids and one D. rotundatus); thus more than 1% of all snails offered survived ingestion. In an additional experiment, some A. biplicata and C. laminata remained attached to birds' legs by pedal adhesion in simulated flight trials where the birds' legs oscillated at the maximum rate achieved during flight.
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