. Energy News .




.
WATER WORLD
'Iron' fist proposed for Miami's giant snail problem
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 11, 2011


Huge, slimy snails from Africa have overrun a Miami-area town and the US government said Tuesday a potent pesticide is the best way to get rid of their exploding numbers.

Thousands of the four-to-eight inch (10-20 centimeter) giant African snails have been collected in Coral Gables, a town in Miami-Dade County, since the infestation was first discovered in September, said the US Department of Agriculture.

Officials are not sure how or when the exotic snails got to south Florida, but they are hoping to act fast, using the molluscicide iron phosphate to stop to dual-sex creatures from multiplying even faster.

Not only are the giant snails scaring residents, leaving slimy trails and chomping up local cucumber, banana and pumpkin plants, but they also pose a health risk because they carry a dangerous parasite known as the rat lungworm.

If people consume the parasite via contaminated produce or contact with a snail -- and several cases of this have been documented worldwide -- it can enter the central nervous system and cause nausea, headache and nerve damage.

The snails give off a foul odor when they die, and they have been blamed for destroying the whitewashed siding of houses and even causing traffic accidents.

An environmental assessment was issued by the USDA describing the options of doing nothing to kill off the invasive creatures versus applying the pesticide. Public comments are being accepted before a final decision is made.

The proposed remedy is called Sluggo-AG, which uses wheat gluten to attract slugs and snails and contains 1.0% iron phosphate to poison them.

"After eating the bait, snails stop feeding immediately because the iron phosphate interferes with calcium metabolism in their gut. Snails die three to six days later," said the USDA assessment.

"Hand picking of snails will also be conducted as part of the eradication program. Regular and extensive hand picking is effective in reducing snail numbers when done in combination with other control methods," it added.

The big brown creatures have been found mainly in residential neighborhoods, though the affected area also includes parts of two national parks -- Everglades National Park and the Biscayne National Park.

"Iron phosphate is considered practically non-toxic to humans," the report said, adding that cumulative risks to the environment and other animals are low and the compound is not water soluble so is not likely to pollute groundwater.

The poison pellets would be applied with a spreader, like the kind used to spread grass seed or fertilizer, within a 200 yard (meter) radius of any giant snail sighting.

The entire treatment program, if approved, could go on for two to four years.

The last time giant African snails surfaced in south Florida was in 1966, when a boy smuggled three of them from Hawaii and his grandmother set the snails free in her garden.

They quickly started breeding, and it took almost a decade and a million dollars to get rid of them all.

"Seven years later, more than 18,000 snails had been found. The eradication program took nearly 10 years at a cost of $1 million. Eradication was declared in 1975," the USDA said.

Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



WATER WORLD
Doubts remain over global future of sharks
Tegucigalpa, Honduras (UPI) Oct 7, 2011
Doubts remain over the global future of sharks despite an international coalition's commitment toward conservation and try to halt what experts see as a steady slide toward extinction of numerous shark species. Overfishing of sharks, which reproduce and mature slowly, poses risks for the oceans' ecology and the entire global environment, analysts said at the gathering of an internationa ... read more


WATER WORLD
New program to expand, enhance use of LIDAR sensing technology

Indra Tries In Madrid And Seville Space Technology To Detect Heat Islands

RADA Selected for a SAR Development Program

World's highest webcam brings Everest to Internet

WATER WORLD
Raytheon Joins Industry Partners in Honoring USAF for Historic Contributions Through GPS

Russia's Soyuz-2.1B carrier rocket orbits Glonass satellite

Ruling Fuels Debate On Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking

Raytheon GPS OCX Completes Preliminary Design Review

WATER WORLD
Demonstrators in Bolivia resume march

International bodies to probe crackdown on Bolivia protest

Forest structure, services and biodiversity may be lost even as form remains

USDA: Wood is greenest building material

WATER WORLD
Certain biofuel mandates unlikely to be met by 2022

US unlikely to hit Renewable Fuel Standard for cellulosic biofuels

Advancing next gen biofuels by turning up the heat on biomass pretreatment processes

From compost to sustainable fuels as heat loving fungi sequenced

WATER WORLD
SOLON and PG and E 15-MW Five Points Solar PV Station Goes Live

Renewvia Energy and PSE and G Cut Ribbon on Milestone Solar Project

School Gets World's First Solar Hot Air PPA for HVAC

SPI Joins with KDC Solar for Solar Facility in New Jersey

WATER WORLD
Euro Bank: Wind policy 'direction' needed

Natural Power US to act as Owner's Engineer on 2.1GW Wyoming wind farm

Natural Power deploys first dual-mode ZephIR wind lidar in India

New energy in search for future wind

WATER WORLD
Sundance says 'no reason' to doubt Hanlong deal

Mountaintop coal mining moves a step ahead

13 killed in China mine explosion

Concern as China firm to buy Australian coal mine

WATER WORLD
One year after contested Nobel, Norway reaches out to China

China province cools hopes of 'one-child' policy easing

China arrests 17,000 in major crime drive

More Tibetans self-immolate, one dies


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement