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Native snails radio-tracked in NZ first

Native snails radio-tracked in NZ first


Researchers have had a unique insight into the behaviour of New Zealand’s carnivourous snail Powelliphanta hochstetteri after ten of the rare snails were radio-tracked in the Abel Tasman National Park.

Snail tracker Dr Brian Lloyd is the only person to have radio-tracked snails in New Zealand and this is the first time snails have been tracked at night. Dr Lloyd, assisted by Dr Ruth Bollongino, attached tiny radio transmitters to the snails near Canaan Downs, in the upper reaches of the Abel Tasman, to investigate their ranging behaviour and activity. The snails in this study were from the sub-species P.h. hochstetteri, which is ranked as nationally endangered because of predation by rats, possums and pigs.

The snails were monitored, day and night for 41 days. Unsurprisingly, they didn’t travel great distances, on average just 1.3m in a night, although one did travel 3.8m overnight. Snails were usually only active for one or two nights during warm, moist conditions and then remained inactive for longer periods.

“I was expecting the snails would travel in random directions, but they actually tend to move in a straight line with a slight leftward bias. None went back to the same spot, which indicates they are not territorial and don’t seem to have a home base,” says Dr Lloyd.

The information from the snail tracking will help improve the accuracy of population estimates from mark-recapture and other survey methods. 200 snails, including the critically endangered species Rhytida oconnori, were also tagged and monitoring will be repeated to survey population changes over time.”

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Populations of both Powelliphanta hochstetteri and Rhytida oconnori are known to be declining in the Abel Tasman. However recent surveys by the Department of Conservation and Project Janszoon found the two species to be more widely distributed than previously thought.

DOC biodiversity ranger Mike Ogle likens Rhytida oconnori to kakapo, as they are both classified as nationally critical. “Imagine finding you had 20% more kakapo than you’d thought, people would be popping the champagne corks. This monitoring is providing valuable insights and Project Janszoon and DOC are now in a much better position to secure the future of these snails in the Abel Tasman,” he says.

The Rhytida oconnori snail is found at only two sites in New Zealand, in the Abel Tasman and at Parapara Peak in Golden Bay. The survey was undertaken as part of Project Janszoon’s work to restore the ecology of the Abel Tasman National Park.


ENDS

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