The uncertain history of land snails on Barbados: Implications for conservation

Citation
R. Chase et Dg. Robinson, The uncertain history of land snails on Barbados: Implications for conservation, MALACOLOGIA, 43(1-2), 2001, pp. 33-57
Citations number
94
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
MALACOLOGIA
ISSN journal
00762997 → ACNP
Volume
43
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
33 - 57
Database
ISI
SICI code
0076-2997(2001)43:1-2<33:TUHOLS>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
There is a growing need to document and conserve molluscan biodiversity, bo th for scholarly reasons and for public benefit. While the pursuance of the se goals necessarily relies on historical records, the accuracy of such rec ords is often taken for granted. We analyzed six previously published lists of land snails on the island of Barbados, and we compared them with result s from our own field survey and our study of institutional collections. The current fauna contains six endemic species. Another endemic, Bulimulus fus cus, is probably extinct, and the status of two additional endemics, Lucide lla barbadensis and Pseudopineria barbadensis, is unknown. Our total of 22 resident species is close to the total number of confirmed species collecte d by three earlier workers dating from 1862, but there are considerable dif ferences in the four lists. When any one list is compared with any one of t he others, each contains from one to six species that are absent from the o ther. Altogether, we confirm 31 species as present on Barbados at some time in the period 1862 to the present, compared with a total of 58 species rep orted by earlier workers. Our analysis allows us to confirm just 23 of the 37 species reported by Brown in 1903, whose list is the basis for a widely consulted conservation reference. By examining institutional collections an d tracking down all pertinent literature, we discovered numerous errors of identity, locality and taxonomy. Adding to the task facing modern workers i s the finding that at least 136 species names have been used to refer to 38 valid taxa, as a result of misidentifications, synonyms and genus/species combinations. We conclude that indications of historical trends in snail di versity should be treated with caution until critically evaluated.