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Scale-dependence in geographic variation in a freshwater gastropod across the Palearctic
Authors:Maxim V Vinarski  Sergei S Kramarenko
Institution:1. Laboratory of Macroecology and Biogeography of Invertebrates, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russiaradix.vinarski@gmail.com;3. Department of genetics, animal feeding and biotechnology, Mykolayiv National Agrarian University, Mykolayiv, Ukraine
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The reality of spatial clinal variation in morphological traits of freshwater pulmonate snails (Gastropoda: Pulmonata) has repeatedly been questioned or totally discounted. There is a lack of sound statistical evidence in the articles hitherto published on this subject supporting these claims. Here, by means of different analytical methods (analysis of spatial autocorrelation, linear regression analysis, canonical correlation analysis and others), we demonstrate that shell variation in the dwarf pond snail, Galba truncatula, is patterned in space throughout the northern and central Palearctic, with latitudinally-oriented clines in body size and in some shell proportions. Shell size in G. truncatula decreases with latitude and temperature, representing a special case of converse Bergmann cline. However, the temperature itself is hardly the main driver of shell size variation. It is argued that the shorter growing seasons at high latitudes may represent a better explanation for the observed trend. Shell proportions in the dwarf pond snails vary weakly at the macrogeographic scale, being spatially patterned at lower (mesogeographic) scales around 1200–1500?km. In general, spatial variation in G. truncatula shell size is decoupled from variation in shell shape, demonstrating clear scale-dependence similar to that found in different species of terrestrial (non-aquatic) pulmonate snails.
Keywords:Body size  clinal variation  multi-scale approach  pulmonate snails  spatial autocorrelation
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