There
are three possible ways that land snails could have crossed the ocean to get
to our remote islands. First, they might have been carried over the ocean from
a distant continent or from another island on rafts of driftwood
or fallen logs. But salt kills land snails, so this seems unlikely. Perhaps
they were carried here by birds. Sometimes snails get caught up in the feathers
of birds, especially if they are really small snails. And third, they might
have been blown by the wind. Scientists have found that very small snails can
indeed be blown long distances by strong winds.
A
small snail attached to a leaf, caught up in a cyclone, could be blown hundreds,
perhaps thousands of miles across the ocean. Through evolutionary time (millions
of years), these seemingly unlikely events had only to happen very occasionally
in order for a few land snails to eventually colonize our islands.
Once
the land snails arrived and managed to survive, they began to evolve to local
conditions. Some species changed and became so different from their ancestors
that scientists now identify them as different species. Others evolved into
more than one species. This is how the Samoan islands came to have many land
snail species found nowhere else on earth they evolved after they arrived
here. Many of the local snail species have attractively colored shells and have
often been used in the making of ula or leis and for other ornamental purposes.
For instance, the hanging light fixtures in the old lobby of the Rainmaker Hotel
in Pago Pago contained 10,000 or more shells of tree snails that used to be
abundant in the forests of Tutuila.
But now many of our local snail species are disappearing. At least seven species
have become extremely rare and one of them, Diastole matafaoi from Tutuila,
is now extinct. Others are undoubtedly in trouble but have simply not been fully
evaluated yet. The two main reasons for their decline are the same reasons that
biodiversity is vanishing all over the world. First is habitat destruction or
modification. As native forest is cut down for timber or cleared for agriculture
or urban development, the habitat of those snail species that depend on the
forest disappears and so the snails disappear too. Second is the introduction
to the islands of alien species species that have been brought to the
islands by humans, either on purpose or accidentally. These aliens include pigs
that destroy the forest by rooting for food and creating wallows, plants that
grow and reproduce more strongly than the native species and replace them in
the forest, birds that spread alien plants by carrying their seeds into native
forest, rats and ants that prey on snails, and many other species that people
have introduced to the islands.



These
alien species also include snails and slugs that come from elsewhere in the
world. Most people are likely to see only these aliens unless they hike into
the most pristine native forest. Perhaps the most commonly seen are the giant
African snail (sisi aferika, Achatina fulica) and the large black or
brown slugs. But there are many other species that are not so obvious but that
can be found easily just by turning over some leaves on the ground almost anywhere
in the islands.
The
giant African snail is a pest of agriculture and in gardens but some of these
other less well-known species may also be causing problems for the native snail
species. Two of them (Subulina octona and Paropeas achatinaceum)
are now the most abundant snails in the leaf debris of native forest throughout
the islands. It is quite possible that they are impacting native snails by out-competing
them for the resources they depend upon.
Another
alien snail, the predatory snail known as the cannibal snail or
rosy wolf snail (Euglandina rosea) was introduced in an ill-conceived
attempt to control the giant African snail by eating it. It was introduced even
though there is no scientific evidence that it would reduce populations of the
African snail. The problem is that it attacks native snail species that had
evolved in the absence of such aggressive predators. Some of our local species
reproduce at a very slow rate and this means that their populations are highly
vulnerable to sustained predation. Euglandina rosea is thought to have
been introduced only to Tutuila and Tau. In western Samoa it was introduced
to Upolu in the 1990
An
even more voracious predator of snails, the flatworm Platydemus manokwari,
was unfortunately introduced to Upolu in 2003 to control the African snail.
This freeliving flatworm appears to be common on Tutuila Island as well. It
is black or dark brown, with a single line down its back, and it can grow to
almost 3 inches long and 1/4 inch wide. This flatworm is believed to have decimated
snail populations on other Pacific islands.

We
do not know much about the basic biology of these land snails. Some species
have separate males and females, but others are hermaphrodites, where each snail
is both male and female. However, most hermaphroditic snails still reproduce
by mating with another individual each snail can act simultaneously as
a male and as a female, or in some species the snails take turns being males
and females. Most snails lay eggs, but some give birth to live young
miniature snails that simply crawl away. The snails that produce live young
tend to grow and reproduce very slowly some of the tree snails may take
over a year to reach full size and may live as long as 5-10 years, producing
only 10-20 young per year. This contrasts with egg-laying species that probably
grow much quicker, produce many eggs, but do not live as long.
Many
of our native land snails are found only on our islands that is, they
are endemic to the Samoan Archipelago. Some of them even occur only on a single
island, so they are endemic to that island. Their shells come in all shapes
and sizes flat, tall, rounded or spiraled. Some live in trees, where
they may eat dying leaves. Others live on the ground and probably feed on dead
leaves. Together with fungi and other microorganisms that help to decompose
the leaf debris, snails contribute to the cycling of nutrients through the ecosystem.
Snails
belong to the second largest group of animals on earth, the mollusks. Only the
arthropods (insects, crustaceans and their relatives) have more known species.
Snails are found just about everywhere the ocean, streams, lakes, and
on land. Over 90 native species of land snails occur in the Samoan Archipelago.
Of these, 64 occur in western Samoa and 47 in American Samoa (many are found
in both places). Slugs, which are snail-like mollusks that have no shell, also
occur locally, but none is a native species -- all are recent introductions
to our islands.
Robert
Cowie
University of Hawaii
29. Disappearing
land snails