Abstract
The American limpet, or slipper-limpet, known to naturalists as Crepidula fornicata, was introduced into England about 1880, being recorded at that time by Mr. B. S. Dodd in the Proceedings of the Malacological Society for 1893. Dodd, it is interesting to note, sounded even at that early time a warning note against the possible spread of this animal, and the probability of its becoming an enemy to the oyster farmer. There is no doubt that this limpet has been, and is probably still being introduced along with American oysters, on which it fixes itself. I have myself seen it unshipped along with oysters, but all the specimens I found had died recently. The spread of the limpet appears to have been very rapid on some grounds, as, for example, at West Mersea, where, since its appearance about eight years ago (from information obtained from local oyster fishermen), it has spread so that it is now more common than oysters.