Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Current advances on the study of snail-snail interactions, with special emphasis on competition process

1995; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde; Volume: 90; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1590/s0074-02761995000200024

ISSN

1678-8060

Autores

José Rabelo de Freitas, M. B. L. Santos,

Tópico(s)

Mollusks and Parasites Studies

Resumo

Field work research on population dynamic of snails from the regions of Belo Horizonte and Lagoa Santa give much information about interactions among two or more species of mollusks: Pomacea haustrum, Biomphalaria glabrata, B. tenagophila, B. straminea and Melanoides tuberculata. Data ranging from two years to several decades ago suggest that the Pampulha reservoir is like a cemetery of B. glabrata and B. straminea, species that coexist for more than 14 years in a small part of a stream, whereas only B. glabrata lives in all the streams of the basin. In the last ten to twenty years B. tenagophila has coexisted with P. haustrum and M. tuberculata in the Serra Verde ponds and in the Pampulha dam. However these species have not settled in any of the brooks, except temporarily. The data suggest that the kind of biotope and the habitat conditions are decisive factors for the permanence of each species in its preferencial biotope. B. glabrata, natural from streams and riverheads, quickly disappears from the reservoirs and ponds where it coexists with other species for a short time, independently of the competitive process. Competition needs to be better studied, since in Central America and Caribean islands this kind of study has favored the biological control of planorbid species.

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