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Chester Zoo: Button-sized Bermuda snail returned from the wild
Summary
Conservationists including Chester Zoo say they bred more than 100,000 greater Bermuda snails and have released them back into the wild after a small population was found in Hamilton, Bermuda, ten years ago.
Content
The greater Bermuda snail, about the size of a button, has been helped back into the wild after a decade-long recovery effort. A small group was found in an alleyway in Hamilton, Bermuda, ten years ago. Conservation teams from several countries, including staff from Chester Zoo in the UK, worked together on captive breeding. More than 100,000 snails were reared and have now been released back into the wild.
Key facts:
- The species is known as the greater Bermuda snail and is roughly the size of a button.
- It was thought to be extinct until a small population was discovered in Hamilton, Bermuda, ten years ago.
- International conservationists, including Chester Zoo, joined the recovery effort.
- Breeders reared more than 100,000 snails, which have been released back into the wild.
Summary:
The release of over 100,000 captive-bred greater Bermuda snails is the result of a coordinated international conservation effort. Undetermined at this time.
