Invasion of giant African land snails prompts quarantine in south Florida

Officials set up ‘treatment area’ in Miramar and warn residents the creatures also pose a health risk by carrying a parasite

An invasion of giant African land snails has alarmed residents in south Florida, where authorities have established a quarantine area to try to deal with the destructive pests.

The invasive snails have voracious appetites and consume at least 500 species of plants, according to Florida’s department of agriculture, which is fearful for the state’s lucrative growing industries of citrus and other fruits and vegetables.

In response, it has set up a “treatment area” covering several dozen blocks of the city of Miramar, south-west of Fort Lauderdale, and is warning residents that the slimy creatures also pose a serious health risk to humans by carrying the rat lungworm parasite, known to cause meningitis.

Under the quarantine order, the department says it is unlawful “to move a giant African land snail or a regulated article, including, but not limited to, plants, plant parts, plants in soil, soil, yard waste, debris, compost or building materials”.

It intends to spray the area with the chemical snail bait metaldehyde, which is approved for residential use.

The snails are illegal to import or possess in the US without a permit, and authorities have been trying for years to eradicate them. They can damage buildings, as well as destroying crops, and in some quarters are even considered a delicacy.

In March, customs officers in Detroit intercepted a traveler from Ghana trying to smuggle six snails into the country in a suitcase.

In one of the biggest outbreaks, officials in Miami-Dade discovered almost 150,000 snails in more than two dozen separate areas of the county in 2014, many clinging to houses, eating plaster and stucco to gain calcium for their shells, and eating their way through gardens.

Invasions have occurred in other areas of Florida on an almost annual basis since. Pasco county was placed under quarantine last June after more than a thousand of the snails, which can produce up to 2,500 eggs a year, were discovered in New Port Richey.

Experts believe the snails first arrived in Miami in 1966, and numbers swelled to almost 18,000 within six years. According to an ABC News report, the species was declared eradicated twice in Florida, in 1975, and again in 2021.

“The primary danger is that they’re voracious plant eaters, so they can do an awful lot of damage to both landscapes and to agriculture,” the University of Florida entomologist William Kern told Miami’s Local 10 news station.

“If the snails crawl on uncooked vegetables, you can have a problem with it getting a human infection. With any invasive species, if you find it early, you may be able to control it or eliminate it.”

• This article was amended on 24 June 2023 to remove a reference to “female” giant African land snails; they are hermaphroditic, having both male and female reproductive organs.

Contributor

Richard Luscombe in Miami

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Giant alligator panics golfers as it ambles across course in Florida
Charles Helms filmed the 15ft reptile as it walked across the course towards a lake

Guardian staff

31, May, 2016 @3:41 AM

Article image
Snake's 'boyfriend’ leads hunters to largest python in Florida Everglades
Catch of pregnant female carrying 73 eggs is more than 17ft long as environmentalists struggle to eradicate the non-native species

Richard Luscombe in Miami

07, Apr, 2019 @3:00 PM

Article image
Toilet-invading iguanas among invasive species now banned in Florida
Distraught pet owners can get permits for creatures including pythons and lizards but state wants trade and breeding to stop

Ed Pilkington

22, Mar, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
Florida teens held after crash leaves two alligators hanging from truck window
Authorities say reptiles found in ‘SUV lying on its side’ but no indication of what caused the accident

Richard Luscombe in Miami

20, Dec, 2021 @7:00 AM

Article image
Gator aid: Florida couple call for help after can-do alligator drinks Diet Cokes
Uninvited guest surprised Naples homeowners when they opened door to garage after hearing a crash

Richard Luscombe in Miami

02, May, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
Global heating means almost every sea turtle in Florida now born female
Rising temperatures have made beach sand so warm that eggs incubate above 31C and are overwhelmingly born female, experts say

Maya Yang

04, Aug, 2022 @10:00 AM

Article image
Florida neighborhood hopping with lionhead rabbit invasion
Estimated 60 to 100 rabbits are descendants of a group a backyard breeder illegally let loose when she moved away

Guardian staff and agency

18, Jul, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
Hurricane Ian moves into South Carolina after rampage in Florida
Twenty-one people dead with toll expected to rise after mega-storm carves wide path of devastation and moves north

Richard Luscombe in Miami and Oliver Milman in New York

01, Oct, 2022 @1:20 AM

Article image
Frozen iguanas forecast to shower south Florida as temperatures drop
National Weather Service warned of reptiles falling from trees as iguanas are susceptible to freezing once temperatures fall to 40F

Lauren Aratani

21, Jan, 2020 @11:10 PM

Article image
Hurricane Ian: ‘catastrophic’ damage in Florida as storm heads to South Carolina
Biden says hurricane could ‘be deadliest in state’s history’ as storm regains strength and heads towards South Carolina

Richard Luscombe in Miami

30, Sep, 2022 @6:23 AM