Correctly identifying and mapping the distribution patterns of passively dispersing freshwater organisms is an important task to understand the mechanisms through which these organisms move across the world and to timely counteract the introduction of invasive alien species; moreover, in the light of the growing evidences of the pervasiveness of cryptic species and cryptic biological invasions among all animal groups, the use of molecular identification tools is strongly advisable.In this context, we present the first record of the freshwater jellyfish Craspedacusta sowerbii Lankester, 1880 in the Mediterranean island of Sicily, Italy. This invasive species native of China was found during a routine survey campaign aimed at assessing the freshwater species richness in the Sicilian region. Individuals were collected in November 2017 and identified to species-level through the sequencing of fragments of both mitochondrial and nuclear genes, and their comparison to the sequences available on public databases. The analysis of molecular data proved that the Sicilian population belongs to C. sowerbii s.s., i.e. one of the two major Craspedacusta lineages which have been discovered to have invaded Europe and which were until recently erroneously jointly reported under the binomen Craspedacusta sowerbii. In order to get a clearer frame of the history and patterns of freshwater jellyfish biological invasion worldwide, the need for a molecular 2 identification of all the non-native Craspedacusta populations currently reported as C. sowerbii and the opportunity of monitoring human-impacted ecosystems is stressed.
Malacological research carried out in the mountains of Palermo (Sicily, Italy) allowed us to identify a new population of small terrestrial molluscs. Already from the examination of the shell, it appeared different from the other Sicilian populations, and, the study of the genital morphology, revealed its belonging to a new species of the genus
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