Tiny snails make journey back to Bermuda from extinction

Source: Xinhua| 2020-03-11 08:22:30|Editor: Liu
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LONDON, March 10 (Xinhua) -- Thousands of tropical snails, believed to be extinct in the wild for more than 15 years, have been released back to their homeland in Bermuda by conservationists at England's Chester Zoo.

A conservation program has successfully prevented the extinction of two species, lesser Bermuda snails and greater Bermuda snails.

The 800 "lesser Bermuda snails" have been given a new lease of life after being bred and reared by the zoo's invertebrate specialists.

It's the first time lesser snails have been returned to the wild after the earlier successful reintroduction of greater snails.

In total, 10,800 snails bred at Chester Zoo have been flown from the UK to Bermuda to boost wild population.

The zoo said Tuesday that 800 lesser Bermuda snails, which were once driven to the brink of existence, have traveled over 4,800 kilometers back home to Bermuda.

Feared to have vanished from the wild altogether, the species is listed as critically endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and experts say that the last live individuals were seen in Bermuda more than 15 years ago.

The move to recover the species comes after 18,000 greater Bermuda snails -- a close relative of the lesser Bermuda snail -- were successfully reintroduced last year by conservationists from Chester Zoo and the Bermudian government.

Now, a further 10,000 greater Bermuda snails have also been sent back to Bermuda to boost their number and distribution across the Oceanic islands.

It's the first time the two species of snails have ever been reintroduced as part of a conservation breeding and release program in Bermuda.

Gerardo Garcia, the zoo's Curator of Lower Vertebrates and Invertebrates, said: "It's an unbelievable feeling to be able to say that we've successfully prevented the extinction of two incredibly important snails."

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