Description
Additional Taxonomic information, researched by Midge Kramer:
Family - Littorinidae; Gray; 1840
Genus - Littorina; Ferussac; 1822
Common Names - Couvins; pinpatches; wilks (British Isles); bigoreau; vignot (France); brelin (Brittany); alikruik or kreukel (Holland); pupunge (Sweden).
Synonymy - Turbo littoreus 1758 Linne ( in Lin. Syst. Nat. 12th ed., cited by Gould 1870)
Turbo littoralis auct. non Pennant 1771
Turbo rudis Blainv. (Clay 1961)
Turbo ustulatus Lam (Clay 1961)
Turbo tuberculatus 1828 Wood
Littorina squalida Broderip and Sowerby 1886
Littorina tuberculata 1852 Orbigny
Littorina vulgaris Sowerby (cited by Clay 1961; Gould 1870)
Littorina littorea Johnston (Clay 1961; Gould 1870)
Littorina litorea Menke (Clay 1961; Gould 1870)
Littorina amoricana Locard 1886
Littorina sphaeoidalis Locard 1886
Littorina carinata Norman 1888
Littorina scaliformis Norman 1888
Note: All names are for Eastern Atlantic specimens; all American specimens in literature we have consulted are called L. littorea.
Taxonomy
Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family | Genus |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Animalia | Mollusca | Gastropoda | Monotocardia | Littorinidae | Littorina |
Synonyms
Invasion History
Chesapeake Bay Status
First Record | Population | Range | Introduction | Residency | Source Region | Native Region | Vectors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1959 | Established | Stable | Introduced | Regular Resident | Western Atlantic | Eastern Atlantic | Natural Dispersal(Natural Dispersal) |
History of Spread
Littorina littorea (Common Periwinkle) is native on the Europe from the White Sea to Gibraltar, but absent from Mediterranean (Bequaert 1943). Specimens of L. littorea (dating back to ~1000-1300 B.C. have been found in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in Indian and Norse archaeological sites (Clarke 1961; Clarke and Erskine 1963; Spjeldnaes and Henningsmoen 1963). A single fossil specimen from ~40,000 B.C. is also known from Nova Scotia (Vermeij 1982b). This has been taken to infer the presence of native populations of L. littorea in eastern Canada (Clarke and Erskine 1963), or the introduction of this species by Viking explorers (Spjeldnaes and Henningsmoen 1963). It has been argued that oceanographic conditions prevented the spread of these northern populations until their rediscovery around 1840. It is probably more likely that the nineteenth-century spread of L. littorea resulted from later introductions by European settlers (Carlton 1982; Ganong 1887). One recent molecular analysis (nuclear and mitochondrial DNA) suggested that populations of Littorina littorea on the Atlantic coast of North America are native (Wares et al. 2002). Chapman et al (2007) presented arguments supporting the introduced status of L. littorea, including the likelihood that Ware's analysis insufficiently sampled European genetic diversity, thereby missing possible source populations. A more comprehensive analysis by Blakeslee et al. (2008), incorporating molecular analysis with a greater number samples, parasitological studies, and more sophisticated statistical analysis strongly supports an introduced status for L. littorea in North America, and for its common trematode parasite, Cryptocotyle lingua (Blakeslee et al. (2008), Genetic diversity of L. littorea suggests multiple introductions, possibly as early as Viking times, based on estimates using genetic divergence and assumed mutation rates (400 to 1,000 years ago), but with wide confidence intervals. The spread of L. littorea along the east coast of the United States is summarized below: Gulf of St. Lawrence - L. littorea was collected in 1840 at Pictou Nova Scotia, (Ganong 1887); in 1857 in the Bay of Chaleur 1857 (Bathurst, Nova Scotia) (Bequaert 1943); and now occurs north to Labrador (Vermeij 1982b). Gulf of Maine - In 1857, it was collected in Halifax, on the Atlantic Coast of Nova Scotia (Ganong 1887). It was first collected in the Gulf proper in the Bay of Fundy 1861 (Ganong 1887), occured at Saco ME in 1873, 'in abundance' and reached Provincetown MA by 1870, at which time it was 'very rare'. By 1875, it was abundant (Bequaert 1943; Dexter; 1961) Vineyard Sound; Buzzards Bay - In 1875 L. littorea was rare at Woods Hole MA, but abundant by 1876 (Ganong 1887). Rhode Island Sound - In 1880 L. littorea was collected at Newport RI), where it was abundant by 1887 (Ganong 1887; Morse 1881; Verrill 1880b). Long Island Sound - In 1879, L. littorea was found at New Haven CT (Bequaert 1943). At Cold Spring Harbor (Long Island) in 1899; it was common, but less abundant than other Littorina spp. (Balch 1899). New York Harbour - In 1888 L. littorea was collected at Staten Island NY. (Bequaert 1943). New Jersey Coastal Bays- L. littorea was collected at Atlantic City NJ in 1892 (Bequaert 1943). Delaware Bay - L. littorea reached Cape May NJ by1928 (Bequaert 1943) and Cape Henlopen DE by 1970 (Kraueter 1974). Atlantic Coastal Bays (Chesapeake Bay region)- In 1959 (Wells 1965) first collectedL. littorean the region. It was rare, 'attached to the rocks of a jetty at West Ocean City' directly opposite Ocean City Inlet' (Wells 1965). At Assateague Island MD-VA in 1988-1989 (exact site not given), it was found 'only on rock jetties and wooden groins' (Counts and Bashore 1991). It was reported from Chincoteague VA in 1971 (Kraueter 1974 ), and later at Wachapreague VA (date not given) (Vermeij 1982b). Pacific Coast - Scattered occurrences of Littorina littorea have been noticed from Califonria to Washington since 1937. Early occurrences in Puget Sound, Washington (1937, Hannah 1966), and Trinidad Bay, California (Carlton 1969) may have resulted from transplant so Eastern Oysters (Crassostrea virginica). L. littorea was found in San Francisco Bay in1968-70 and 1977, but did not become established (Carlton 1992). Another specimen was found in 1995 (Cohen and Carlton 1995), and occasional occurrences have been noted since (Ruiz et al., unpublished data). In southern California, a single shell was collected in Newport Bay in 1975 Carlton 1979). A small patch of abundant snails was found in Anaheim Bay in 2002 and was eradicated, apparently successfully (Andrew Chang, personal communication). History References - Balch 1899; Bequaert 1943; Carlton 1992; Clarke 1961; Clarke and Erskine 1963; Cohen and Carlton 1995; Counts and Bashore 1991; Ganong 1887; Kraueter 1974; Morse 1881; Spjeldnaes and Henningsmoen 1963; Vermeij 1982b; Verrill 1880b; Wells 1965
Invasion Comments
Ecology
Environmental Tolerances
For Survival | For Reproduction | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Minimum | Maximum | Minimum | Maximum | |
Temperature (ºC) | 0.1 | 41.0 | 1.0 | 26.0 |
Salinity (‰) | 15.0 | |||
Oxygen | hypoxic | |||
pH | ||||
Salinity Range | poly-eu |
Age and Growth
Male | Female | |
---|---|---|
Minimum Adult Size (mm) | ||
Typical Adult Size (mm) | 22.0 | 22.0 |
Maximum Adult Size (mm) | 36.0 | 36.0 |
Maximum Longevity (yrs) | 20.0 | 20.0 |
Typical Longevity (yrs | 4.0 | 4.0 |
Reproduction
Start | Peak | End | |
---|---|---|---|
Reproductive Season | |||
Typical Number of Young Per Reproductive Event |
|||
Sexuality Mode(s) | |||
Mode(s) of Asexual Reproduction |
|||
Fertilization Type(s) | |||
More than One Reproduction Event per Year |
|||
Reproductive Startegy | |||
Egg/Seed Form |
Impacts
Economic Impacts in Chesapeake Bay
Littorina littorea (Common Periwinkle) is too rare in the Chesapeake region to have any economic importance.
Economic Impacts Outside of Chesapeake Bay
In England, and elsewhere in Europe, Littorina littorea (Common Periwinkle) or 'winkles' are a popular food (Clay 1961). In New England, they are rarely eaten by 'Yankees', or sold in markets, but they are often collected by recent European and Asian immigrants (Fofonoff, personal observation).
Littorina littorea is used to control growth of Enteromorpha spp. on oyster and mussel beds in England, France and Holland (Clay 1961).
The habitat changes caused by Littorina littorea, as described by Bertness (1984) may have greatly affected the distribution of hard and soft clams, scallops, and mussels (Mya arenaria, Mercenaria mercenaria, Argopecten irradians, Mytilus edulis), by decreasing nearshore sediment accumulation.
References - Clay 1961; Bertness 1984
Ecological Impacts on Chesapeake Native Species
Littorina littorea (Common Periwinkle) is rare, and only found on the periphery of the Chesapeake region, and probably has had no impact on native biota. However, this species has had a dramatic ecological impact on the biota of the northern Atlantic coast of North America.
Competition - Littorina littorea in New England decreases the growth rate of the native Littorina saxatilis (Rough Periwinkle) (Yamada 1984). L. littorea also displaced the native mud snail Ilyanassa obsoleta from pilings, bulkheads, seawalls, and marshes, largely restricting Ilyanassa to sand and mudflats. Experimental manipulations show that increasing Littorina densities in these areas results in the emigration of Ilyanassa (Brenchley and Carlton 1983). Study of five salt marsh detritivores, including L. littorea, on Spartina alterniflora detritus suggests that they do not compete for resources. Detritus particles are partitioned by size and do not overlap (Pourreau 1979).
Predation - Littorina littorea eats the egg capsules of Ilyanassa obsoleta (Brenchley 1982).
Herbivory - Herbivores, primarily L. littorea, reduce abundance of ephemeral algae; herbivores strongly promote the appearance of Fucus vesiculosus in New England (Lubchenco 1986).
Habitat Change - L. littorea can convert sandy substratum habitats into hard bottom habitats by bulldozing soft sediments from rock surfaces, and by grazing on erect algae ( Ulva, Enteromorpha, Gracilaria, Chondrus) which help bind and trap sediments. They also decrease the area of salt marshes by grazing on Spartina spp., as well as by sediment removal (Bertness 1984).
References - Bertness 1984; Brenchley 1982; Brenchley and Carlton 1983; Lubchenco 1986; Pourreau 1979; Yamada 1984
Ecological Impacts on Other Chesapeake Non-Native Species
Littorina littorea (Common Periwinkle) is a frequent prey of Carcinus maenas (Green Crab) (Vermeij 1982b), which also reaches the northern edge of the Chesapeake Bay region.
References- Vermeij 1982b
References
Balch, Francis Noyes (1899) List of marine mollusca of Coldspring Harbor, Long Island, with descriptions of one new genus and two new species of nudibranchs, Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History 29: 133-163Bequaert, Joseph C. (1943) The genus Littorina in the Western Atlantic, Johnsonia 1: 1-27
Bertness, Mark D. (1984) Habitat and community modification by an introduced herbivorous snail, Ecology 65: 370-381
Blakeslee, April M. H.; Byers, James E.; Lesser, Michael P. (2008) Solving cryptogenic histories using host and parasite molecular genetics: the resolution of Littorina littorea’s North American origin., Molecular Ecology 17: 3684-3696
Brenchley, G. A. (1982) The current status of the 100-year war between native 'mud' snails, Ilyanassa obsoleta, and a dominant competitor and predator, the European periwinkle, Littorina littorea, Malacological Review 15: 146
Brenchley, G.A.; Carlton, J.T. (1983) Competitive displacement of native mud snails by introduced periwinkles in the New England intertidal zone, Biological Bulletin 165: 543-558
Carlton, James T. (1982) The historical biogeography of Littorina littorea on the Atlantic coast of North America, and implications for the interpretation of the structure of New England intertidal communities, Malacological Review 15: 146
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1995-2023 Malacolog 4.1. http://www.acnatsci.org
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