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Giant land snails are highly invasive and can transmit zoonoses

Nevertheless they are popular pets in Switzerland and other European countries. Jérôme Gippet has published a paper on that topic in collaboration with Jérémie Moulin and Olivia Bates in the journal Parasites and Vectors.

It is urgent to raise public awareness of the health risks associated with L. fulica in both tropical countries and Europe and to regulate its trade and ownership internationally. Our results highlight the importance of accounting for multiple types of human-wildlife interactions when assessing risks of infectious disease emergence. Furthermore, by targeting the species most likely to spread pathogens, we show that it is possible to rapidly identify emerging disease risks on a global scale, thus guiding timely and appropriate responses.

Link to paper

UNIL press release here

RTS

SwissInfo (in English)

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Where do invasive species come from?

RTS radio show Point J, interviewing Cleo on invasive species:

https://avisdexperts.ch/videos/view/16646

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Paper on global insect flows published in Diversity and Distributions

Congratulations to Gyda who published her PhD research in collaboration with Sébastien, Olivia, Cleo and an international team of invasion biologists. The paper is about the role of biogeography, trade and regulations in explaining global flows of insect transport and establishement. You can find it here: Link

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Invasive red fire ants have established in Europe

Cleo was talking about this highly invasive ant species on the Swiss radio show CQFD on RTS:

https://www.rts.ch/la-1ere/programmes/cqfd/14289250-la-redoutable-fourmi-de-feu-debarque-en-europe-19-09-2023.html?mediaShare=1

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Paper in PNAS

Aymeric Bonnamour and Cleo Bertelsmeier have published a study on historical plant invasions predicting current insect invasions. Invasive insects severely impair ecosystem functioning and impact human societies. It is therefore urgent to better predict and prevent future invasions. Using statistical models, they show that nonnative plant introductions are a major driver of insect invasions, and that insect invasions lag behind plant invasions. In the near future, new insect invasions are estimated to increase by 35% worldwide based on recent nonnative plant introductions. The Afrotropics, the Neotropics, and Indomalaya are the regions most at risk of future invasions. These results highlight that limiting the introduction and spread of nonnative plants will be key to preventing future insect invasions. Link

The study was featured on:

UNIL webpage

CQFD radio show (RTS)

Le Temps

RJF

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