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Wonder if it eats slugs too?
#1
Wouldn't it be nice if this worm helped clean up the rat lung epeidemic in Puna? From Yahoo news:

Alien-Like Worm Invades US
LiveScience.com By Stephanie Pappas
5 hours ago
#57457;#57344;#57345;#57469;

A bizarre invasive worm with its mouth in the middle of its belly has been found in the United States for the first time, according to new research.

The New Guinea flatworm (Platydemus manokwari) is only a couple of millimeters thick but grows to be up to 2.5 inches (65 millimeters) long. As its name suggests, the worm is a New Guinea native, but it has been spreading across the globe, hitching rides on exotic plants and in soil. The worm wraps itself around snails and ingests them with a mouthlike structure on its underside. As an invasive species, it's a threat to native snails — so much so that the Invasive Species Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists it among the 100 worst invasive species in the world.

The flatworm had previously been detected in the wild in 15 countries, as well as in a greenhouse in France, but this is the first time it's been found in North America. A multinational group of researchers, led by scientists at the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in France, combed through flatworm specimens and photographs collected by locals around the world. [See Photos of Bizarre Flatworm & Other Destructive Invasive Species]

Spreading threat

The researchers discovered P. manokwari in five countries and territories where it had never been reported before: New Caledonia, a small collection of islands in the southwest Pacific; Singapore; the Solomon Islands, also in the southwest Pacific; Puerto Rico; and Florida.



The introduction of the species appeared to be recent in many of these cases. The worm probably arrived in Florida in or around 2012, the researchers reported in the open-access journal PeerJ. Since then, it seems to have established itself and can now be found in multiple places in Miami-Dade County.



In Puerto Rico, the worm showed up in San Juan, the capital, in 2014. The first discovery of the worm in the Solomon Islands also occurred in 2014, on Guadalcanal.

Wormy genetics

The researchers also discovered two genetic groups, or haplotypes, of the worm. These two groups are virtually indistinguishable except on the level of their genetic codes. One, dubbed the "Australian haplotype," was found only in Australia and the Solomon Islands. The other, dubbed the "World haplotype," has been found in France, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Singapore, the Solomon Islands and Puerto Rico. The specimens found in Florida also belonged to this World haplotype.

The genetic findings suggest that both haplotypes of worm exist in their native New Guinea, but that for unknown reasons, only the World haplotype has spread significantly, the researchers wrote.

The discovery of the flatworm in the United States is particularly concerning because the flatworm had previously been confined mostly to small islands, they added. From Florida, however, P. manokwari could easily spread to the rest of the United States and the Americas.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

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#2
Negative, introducing unknown species already identified as invasive in other tropical areas is a gigantic resounding NO!!!
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#3
Sounds like it just might make it here on it's own is what I was thinking. And wouldn't it be super sweet it if took care of our problem?
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#4
At some point the Law of Unintended Consequences will kick in. It always does.
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#5
According to a professor at UH, its already here...but not spreading to rapidly. ( last couple paragraphs)

http://news.sciencemag.org/plants-animal...s-mainland

Work..Consume...Obey - There's your meaning of life....
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#6
Unintended consequences indeed.
What would be all of the effects on our existing life here?
I don't think we have any idea.
Just like we don't have any idea about invasive species and bilge water
allowed into Hawaii by a repeal of the Jones Act. Just saying.
Think, then act.
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#7
Yea it's already here and may be even more infested with the parasite than the semislug of which 75% of them are infested with the rat lung disease. http://www.malamaopuna.org/ratlung/needtoknow.php
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#8
We've a hammerhead looking worm here with a black head and pale yellow body that already eats snails and slugs.

I've some pics I've taken in the past but not up for uploading them now.
They look identical to this worm and about 1.25" long, the head can sweep back more and appear hooked at the ends depending on how they decide to shape their heads. They're nasty looking little things- https://www.flickr.com/photos/40987954@N00/1226699262/
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#9
The hammerhead worm is a different flatworm, Bipalium kewense. It eats mainly earthworms.
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#10
If you're looking for a slug-eater, there is an animal that is much more benign, noninvasive, and already here. The duck. And better yet (I asked CTAHR and got the info from them)you can safely eat the eggs or meat of a duck that has eaten the slugs. My ducks like slugs so much that they do tricks for them :-)
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