Lucy Bannerman
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It has taken 110 years to cover 27 painstaking metres, but one of Britain's most recently discovered species has finally found a home.
Papillifera papillaris - a type of Italian snail - arrived in England near the end of the 19th century, having hitched a ride on a stone balustrade imported from Rome. It then disappeared.
A colony of the tiny snails, which have distinctive spindle-shaped shells 11mm long, has now been found on the “tortoise fountain” in the Italian-style gardens of the Cliveden Estate, Buckinghamshire.
The visitors were discovered by volunteers who were cleaning statues in the formal gardens of the mansion, which today is a hotel.
The snail, which has no formal English name and has been nicknamed “the Cliveden snail”, had remained hidden since its arrival on a large marble and brick balustrade shipped from the gardens of the Villa Borghese in 1896. That works out at 25cm a year.
Jane Ridout Sharpe, a snail expert, helped to identify the tiny creature, several hundred of which can be found in the crevices and carved details of the stonework. It appeared to have taken the snails more than 100 years to make it some 27m downhill to the terrace steps that lead to the parterre in the ornamental gardens.
The creature is common in the Mediterranean, where it is often found in old buildings. It is thought to have spread to Malta, again having been accidentally transported with marble imports from Italy. Given the slow spread of the species, it is thought that native British wildlife is unlikely to be affected.
Matthew Oates, the National Trust's conservation adviser, said: “For this small colony of snails to remain undiscovered for more than 100 years, despite thousands of people visiting Cliveden every year, is remarkable. It really is a case of hidden nature revealing itself to the world after remaining in splendid isolation for so long, and demonstrates how important our built structures can be for wildlife. Discoveries like this are rare and it's a chance for us to celebrate the amazing nature of wildlife.”
He added: “Although the 'Cliveden snail' hitched a ride to the UK accidentally, it doesn't appear to be a threat to our native wildlife, as it has taken one hundred years to get from the balustrade to the house, so we're now working to ensure that it has a secure future at Cliveden.”
The Italian snail is the fourth species of fauna new to Britain to be found at National Trust properties since 2003 - along with a mistletoe bug, a paper wasp and a species of small fly.
The trust recently began a wildlife survey to find out just what was hiding in its historic gardens, and has asked wildlife enthusiasts who visit them to report their findings. The discovery of two types of fungus new to Britain at Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire, was also confirmed yesterday, including one black truffle.
Cliveden, like many National Trust estates, contains a rich array of wildlife, including common blue and brown argus butterflies as well as scarce species of mining bee and wasp, jewel beetles and tumbling flower beetles.
The estate was built in 1851 and contains an Italianate mansion and formal gardens stretching down to the Thames. It was the home of Viscountess (Nancy) Astor, the society hostess who became Britain's first woman MP, and was the hub of the pro-
appeasement Cliveden Set in the late 1930s. It gained another sort of notoriety after the call girl Christine Keeler met John Profumo, the Secretary of State for War, there in 1963.
The stately home is now leased by the National Trust as a luxury hotel.
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Hate to disappoint you henry but all snails are hermaphrodites.
Still takes two of them to mate but still neither male or female which leaves the feminists to peacefully keep standing on all the male chauvinists.. like yourself perhaps??
Long may the Cliveden live :)
Kelly Halliday, chelmsford,
Give it a year or two and the feminists will squash all the male ones and kill the entire species off.
Henry Adams, Manchester, UK
Did they witness the Profumo Scandal - if only they could talk !!!!
ian payne, walsall,
No mention of the little fellas prospering in France... I wonder why.
Phil Mann, Newcastle upon Tyne,
Not being a great lover of snails, particuIarly when the garden snails eat my plants, I think this is wonderful news given that we have lost, and are losing, so many species caused by man and climate change.
Well done to all those involved in discovering and protecting this little creature.
Julie Sherville, Portsmouth, Hampshire