Physical Characteristics
Shell Size: Adult shells typically measure 12 to 15 mm in diameter and 9 to 12 mm in height.
Coloration: The background shell color is usually ivory white.Patterns: Shells often display variable dark brown spiral bands made of dots, dashes, or solid lines.
Texture: Under magnification, the shell surface has distinctive cross-hatched vertical scratches.
Juvenile Trait: Young snails feature a sharp keel around their shell midline, which rounds out as they mature.
Habitat & Behavior
Preferences: They thrive in dry, sandy coastal areas, open scrublands, and dunes.
Aestivation: During hot summer months, they climb vertical structures like fences and tree trunks to escape ground heat.
Mass Clusters: Thousands can aggregate together on a single plant or structure to form dense colonies.
Survival Seal: They seal their shell with a dried mucus wall (epiphragm) to conserve water.
Temperature Limit: This species cannot survive severe winter frosts.
Diet & Agricultural Impact
Food Sources: They are generalist herbivores eating pastures, cereal seedlings, succulent leaves, and decaying matter.
Crop Damage: They can completely defoliate citrus orchards and vineyards when populations surge.
Farming Pest: They pose a severe agricultural threat by clogging harvesting machinery and contaminating grain yields.
Reproduction & Lifecycle
Mating Type: They are cross-fertilizing hermaphrodites that become active and mate after autumn rains.
Egg Laying: Clutches of 40 to 80 eggs are buried several centimeters deep into moist soil.
Incubation: Soft-shelled eggs absorb water and hatch in roughly 20 days.
Lifespan: Their life cycle spans 1 to 2 years depending on local climate conditions.
Global Distribution & Invasion
Invasive Range: They have established aggressive populations across Australia, South Africa, and California.
Spread Method: Due to their habit of climbing cargo, they are the most frequently intercepted land snail in global trade.
Culinary Use: In Italy's Veneto region, they are locally known as "bovoéto" and traditionally boiled with garlic and olive oil.
