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Environmental scientists search for snails known as "Escargots de Quimper" in Brest, western France.--AFP photos
Environmental scientists search for snails known as "Escargots de Quimper" in Brest, western France.--AFP photos

Snail-by-snail: French city in painstaking operation for tram

They are small, protected, and in absolutely no hurry to move. The presence of the rare Quimper Snail, whose habitat is restricted to areas of northwest France and northern Spain, has caused a major headache for developers seeking to lay down a new tram route in the northwestern French city of Brest. Conservation workers are now picking through undergrowth to individually remove protected snails blocking the planned tram route—one by one.

“Here’s a little one!” shouted Oriane Josser and after just a few minutes of looking during an evening operation. The small Quimper snails, which live in western Brittany and northern Spain, have given property developers in the region cold sweats since football club Stade Brestois had to abandon a planned training centre in 2012. Campaigners also attempted to enlist them against a project to build a gas-fired power plant in mainland France’s westernmost department Finistere.

This photograph taken in Brest, western France show a snail known as the
This photograph taken in Brest, western France show a snail known as the "Escargot de Quimper".

When laying out the city’s second tram line, Brest authorities found “it was impossible to avoid all Quimper snail habitats,” said Caroline Francois-Even of Biotope, an agency that produces environmental studies. Instead, the city decided to move as many snails as could be found from the planned route over four rainy evenings in November, just before the gastropods enter hibernation.

In the first operation last week, 92 snails and two black-and-yellow fire salamanders—another protected species—were brought to a new habitat nearby. “By protecting the snails, we’re also protecting its habitat and a whole range of species that live there,” said Biotope ecologist Timothee Sherer.

Workers have set up tarps to prevent the snails from inching back onto the construction site. Bretagne Vivante, a Brittany-wide environmental group, believes Brest is “making an effort” to “sort out the problem in a gentle way,” said Jean-Noel Ballot, one of the organization’s managers. As well as the snails, planners have had to contend with 75 protected species from orchids to small birds, newts and bats along the tram’s route. — AFP

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