Cuba battles plague of giant snails
HAVANA — Silently and without pause, the giant African snail has been invading Cuba.
With their shiny, brilliantly striped shells and bodies up to 8 inches (20 centimetres) long, the snails have become public enemy No. 1 for epidemiologists and citizens have grown to fear their ability to transmit diseases and harm crops.
“I never heard of them before, but now they’re everywhere,” said Yusmila Marín, a 29-year-old nurse who lives in a neighbourhood rife with the mollusks, whose scientific name is Achatina fulica.
In recent months, Cuban authorities have activated the nationwide civil defence system to battle the snails. But some say the state’s response is inadequate.