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Ontogeny,environment, and shape of a marine snail Thais lamellosa Gmelin
Authors:Tom M. Spight
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A.
Abstract:Shell shape, as expressed in terms of log weight/log length, (relative weight), changes progressively as Thais lamellosa Gmelin grows. Relative weight decreases at all sites, but the decrease is relatively rapid at localities with low food supply and correspondingly low growth rates. Snails at these sites are ‘slender’ relative to those at sites with greater barnacle populations. The sitespecific shapes are phenotypic, since snails with fat and with slender parents all became slender in the laboratory where food was readily available and growth rates were higher than those observed at most field localities. Since these snails did not become ‘fat’, food abundance is not the immediately causal, environmental factor promoting a slow change in relative weight. Two other species of Thais live in the same places and undergo similar changes in relative weight.
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