European Ocean Biodiversity Information System

[ report an error in this record ]basket (0): add | show Print this page

Petricolaria pholadiformis
VLIZ Alien Species Consortium (2022). Petricolaria pholadiformis. Niet-inheemse soorten in het Belgisch deel van de Noordzee en omliggende estuaria = Non-indigenous species from the Belgian part of the North Sea and estuaria. VLIZ Alien Species Consortium (VLIZ): Oostende. Diff. pag. pp.
Part of: Niet-inheemse soorten in het Belgisch deel van de Noordzee en omliggende estuaria = Non-indigenous species from the Belgian part of the North Sea and estuaria. VLIZ Alien Species Consortium (VLIZ): Ostend. ISSN 2983-5518
Related to:
VLIZ Alien Species Consortium (2020). Potamopyrgus antipodarum - Jenkins' waterhoren, in: Verleye, T. et al. Niet-inheemse soorten in het Belgisch deel van de Noordzee en aanpalende estuaria. VLIZ Special Publication, 86: pp. 529-535, more

Keyword
    Potamopyrgus antipodarum (J. E. Gray, 1843) [WoRMS]

Project Top | Author 
  • Niet-inheemse soorten in het Belgisch deel van de Noordzee en omliggende estuaria

Author  Top 
  • VLIZ Alien Species Consortium

Abstract
    The New Zealand mud snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum originally occurs in New Zealand, but was transported to Europe around 1859 in barrels of drinking water. The little snails must have got into (and out) the barrels while washing or refilling them. The first Belgian observations of the species date from 1927, in the Scheldt near Antwerp. The species occurs in fresh to (slightly) brackish water. New Zealand mud snails can reproduce asexually by parthenogenesis very quickly.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Author