Kd. Mccoy et Td. Nudds, INTERSPECIFIC VARIATION IN CLIMBING BY GASTROPODS - IMPLICATIONS FOR TRANSMISSION OF PARELAPHOSTRONGYLUS-TENUIS, The American midland naturalist, 137(2), 1997, pp. 320-328
Most studies of the gastropod intermediate hosts of the nematode paras
ite Parelaphostrongylus tenuis used cardboard placed on the ground to
collect host specimens. We examined interspecific variation in climbin
g behavior of seven gastropod species from Algonquin Park, Ontario, to
evaluate the potential for sampling bias and its implications (1) for
inferences regarding which gastropods may be important in parasite tr
ansmission and (2) for estimating parasite prevalence in gastropods. G
astropods were highly variable in the degree to which they climbed and
when they did so. Zonitoides arboreus, Anguispira alternata and Deroc
eras laeve climbed relatively infrequently; Stenotrema fraternum and M
esodon sp. were most arboreal. Discus cronkhitei and Succinea ovalis w
ere intermediate; they spent about as much time on the ground as they
did climbing. Thus, the latter species are potentially most important
as intermediate hosts because they frequent the ground where they can
become infected with the parasite, but also climb to where they may be
more vulnerable to ingestion by foraging deer and moose. A comparison
of gastropod collections was made between studies that used cardboard
to sample gastropods and studies where hand-searching was used. It re
vealed that species from the families Zonitidae and Limacidae comprise
d the largest fractions of collections using cardboard, consistent wit
h the idea that cardboard samples are biased to terrestrial species. I
f collections are biased, prevalence levels detected for gastropod hos
ts of P. tenis may underestimate true levels. Therefore, the degree of
arboreality among gastropod intermediate hosts could be important to
consider when evaluating the potential for different species to serve
as important vectors of transmission of P. tenuis.