It turns out that Lissachatina fulica, the snail species I always encounter in fields, gardens, and even roadsides, is an African animal. True to its name, African giant snail become the only land snail species I often encounter, mostly on areas with high humidity level and lush vegetation. When I was little, I remember I took one home and fed it fish pellets. Crunch, crunch...
The species is widespread, as I saw them in areas outside Jakarta's urban area - Bogor, Legian, Yogyakarta, etc. They are so abundant that apparently, I mistook a native species (Amphidromus sp.) as a 'leucitic' variant of African giant snail.
This large snail is voracious, as I fed some of them quite recently with fresh salads, and breed like crazy (lots of hatchlings in my garden that I had to control their population to prevent them eating seedlings). But I think regardless what species, land snails remain a mild threat to my garden.
An albino African land snail (Achatina fulica) observed climbing a tree in a garden in Legian, Indonesia. Specimen is wild, roaming freely with some other regular snails
An African land snail observed at Jakarta, Indonesia.
Specimen is wild; data provided by Seek
An African giant snail (Lissachatina fulica) at Depok, Indonesia
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