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Biological control of<i>Biomphalaria glabrata</i>and<i>B. straminea</i>by the competitor snail<i>Thiara tuberculata</i>in a transmission site of schistosomiasis in Martinique, French West Indies
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Citations
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References
1989
Year
BiologySchistosoma Mansoni InfectionBiomphalaria GlabrataParasitic DiseaseFrench West IndiesTransmission SiteCompetitor SnailParasite ControlSchistosomiasisBiological ControlAquatic OrganismMicrobiologySymbiosisMedicineParasitologyHost-parasite Relationship
In Martinique, intestinal schistosomiasis was discovered at the beginning of this century. The intermediate host snail, Biomphalaria glabrata, was considered in the past as a common species in the different habitats of the island, but during the last decade it has been found only in water-cress beds. Several of these water-cress cultures contained mixed populations of B. glabrata and B. straminea. Moreover, these habitats also constituted transmission sites for Schistosoma mansoni infection. In 1979 the thiarid snail Thiara ( = Melanoides) tuberculata was discovered in Madame river, Fort-de-France, and in the following years at other sites. In 1983 a programme of biological control using this snail was started in two groups of water-cress beds. In 1981-1982 the study site, Roxelane valley, sheltered important populations of B. glabrata (45-256 individuals/m2) and of B. straminea (2-30 ind./m2). In January 1983 the competitor T. tuberculata was introduced into the two groups of water-cress beds (1.3 and 1.7 ind./m2 respectively) and during subsequent years snail population sampling was carried out. The results showed rapid colonization by the competitor snail, whose densities reached 178 and 325 ind./m2 in November 1983 and a maximum of 9941 and 13,388 ind./m2 in October 1984. During that time, B. glabrata populations declined: 153 and 41 ind./m2 in November 1983, 4 and 0 ind./m2 in October 1984, and 0 ind./m2 in the two groups of water-cress beds in October 1985. A similar phenomenon was observed for B. straminea. Since October 1985 neither planorbid species has been found by exhaustive sampling of the habitats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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