2012
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12041
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How did this snail get here? Several dispersal vectors inferred for an aquatic invasive species

Abstract: SUMMARY1. How species reach and persist in isolated habitats remains an open question in many cases, especially for rapidly spreading invasive species. This is particularly true for temporary freshwater ponds, which can be remote and may dry out annually, but may still harbour high biodiversity. Persistence in such habitats depends on recurrent colonisation or species survival capacity, and ponds therefore provide an ideal system to investigate dispersal and connectivity. 2. Here, we test the hypothesis that t… Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(77 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(89 reference statements)
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“…Although papers documenting passive dispersal of adult microcrustaceans, water mites and plants are available in the literature (Dahms, 1995;Di Sabatino et al, 2004;Allen, 2007;Frisch & Green, 2007;van Leeuwen et al, 2013;Bruckerhoff et al, 2014), passive dispersal mechanisms more generally require the production of resting stages able to survive unfavourable environmental conditions and to act as dispersal propagules, functionally performing as plant seeds (see Van Damme & Sinev, 2013). Resting stages are the most important propagules for many aquatic taxa (Rundle et al, 2002) and are easily transported by different physical and biological vectors (Fig.…”
Section: Passive Dispersal Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although papers documenting passive dispersal of adult microcrustaceans, water mites and plants are available in the literature (Dahms, 1995;Di Sabatino et al, 2004;Allen, 2007;Frisch & Green, 2007;van Leeuwen et al, 2013;Bruckerhoff et al, 2014), passive dispersal mechanisms more generally require the production of resting stages able to survive unfavourable environmental conditions and to act as dispersal propagules, functionally performing as plant seeds (see Van Damme & Sinev, 2013). Resting stages are the most important propagules for many aquatic taxa (Rundle et al, 2002) and are easily transported by different physical and biological vectors (Fig.…”
Section: Passive Dispersal Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The arrow from Spain to French Aquitaine was added on the basis of the results by Cellamare et al (2010) 2008a; Meier & Soininen, 2014) and dispersal by surface waters (hydrochory) like that occurring in floodplains or during the rice-fields inundation (e.g. Frisch et al, 2005;Akasaka & Takamura, 2012;Van Leeuwen et al, 2013, and references therein) can also be important. However, this mechanism is not treated here in detail because its action is quite obvious.…”
Section: Dispersal By Physical Vectorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the capacity for dispersal may not reflect how the organism experiences environmental variability. For example, freshwater gastropods may lack a planktonic stage, but they can be dispersed as juveniles or adults by water birds and mammals (Wesselingh et al, 1999, Figuerola and Green, 2002, Van Leeuwen, 2012Van Leeuwen et al, 2013). Further, marine species with benthic development may disperse widely via rafting on seaweeds (Highsmith, 1985;Martel and Chia, 1991;Donald et al, 2011).…”
Section: Environmental Variability Of Marine Versus Freshwater Enviromentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During flooding of large areas, snails can move actively or can be carried passively and might connect with other snail populations in the wetlands of the flooded area ( Van de Meutter et al, 2006). Snails in annually flooded rice fields, for instance, form one large population (Van Leeuwen et al, 2013).…”
Section: Spreadmentioning
confidence: 99%