News Release

New predatory flatworm discovered in southeastern United States

Peer-Reviewed Publication

North Carolina State University

Predatory flatworm species discovered in the United States

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Scientists have discovered a new species of predatory flatworm in North Carolina. Once identified, the researchers found that the species has also been detected in Florida – but have no idea where the species originated. The species, named Amaga pseudobama, is still little studied but is thought to be a terrestrial predator that feeds on soft-bodied organisms.

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Credit: Matt Bertone

Scientists have discovered a new species of predatory flatworm in North Carolina. Once identified, the researchers found that the species has also been detected in Florida – but have no idea where the species originated.

“There are many types of flatworms, but most of them are aquatic,” says Matt Bertone, co-author of a paper on the discovery and director of the Plant Disease and Insect Clinic at North Carolina State University. “Most of the flatworms that you do find on land exist in tropical ecosystems, so it was somewhat surprising to find a terrestrial flatworm species in North Carolina that was unknown to science.

“Free-living flatworms – the ones that aren’t parasites – are predators that feed on other soft-bodied organisms, such as earthworms and slugs,” Bertone says. “And people are often concerned that unidentified flatworms may be toxic, may be carrying parasites, or may be invasive species that pose a threat to native ecosystems.”

As a result, when a commercial nursery in North Carolina found unidentified flatworms in some flowerpots, they sent it to Bertone to find out what they were. The flatworms in question are brownish black and just under an inch long. Bertone sent photos of the flatworms to an expert to get a preliminary identification, as well as sending physical specimens to get a definitive diagnosis of the species.

Based on photos, flatworm experts thought the flatworm was a known species, Obama nungara, that is native to South America. However, after molecular and histological analysis, researchers in France and Australia found that this was not only a different species, it was not even in the same genus.

Meanwhile, Bertone was sent more of these unidentified flatworms from two other locations in North Carolina – hundreds of miles away from where the first flatworms were found. In addition, these new samples were found in residential landscapes, not a commercial nursery.

“The new species is called Amaga pseudobama and we know very little about it,” Bertone says. “It has not been observed in the wild or native habitats, so we don’t know much about how it interacts with its environment. We can infer from what we know about related species, but we don’t know precisely what it preys on, how quickly it reproduces, and so on.”

Once the new species was officially identified, researchers found that samples of the species had been collected before – but nobody knew what they had. There were multiple samples that had been collected in Florida in 2015.

“This, coupled with the fact that the initial North Carolina samples were found in plants that had been shipped from Georgia, suggests that A. pseudobama may be found across the Southeast,” Bertone says. “It’s also possible that these were merely isolated instances. We just don’t know. Until we have more confirmed observations of this species, we won’t know how established they are.

“Finding a new flatworm species is not necessarily a surprise – these animals are so little studied that there are likely many species awaiting discovery,” Bertone says. “However, the fact that we know so little about them is one reason they are worth paying attention to. Do they pose a risk to native worms and, by extension, native ecosystems? We have to study these species to find out. And the first step in that process is clearly identifying a species and naming it.”

The paper, “A new species of alien land flatworm in the Southern United States,” is published in the open access journal PeerJ. Corresponding author of the paper is Jean-Lou Justine of the Museum national d’Histoire naturelle in Paris. Co-authors include Delphine Gey of the Museum national d’Histoire naturelle; Romain Gastineau of the University of Szczecin, in Poland; David Robinson of Drexel University; and Leigh Winsor of James Cook University, in Australia.


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