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Shell shape and land-snail habitat in a Mediterranean and desert fauna
Authors:JOSEPH HELLER
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, The Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 91904, Israel
Abstract:The bimodal distribution of shell shape (height: diameter), that is found in various geographically widely separate and taxonomically distinct land snail faunas of many different regions of the world, occurs also in a Mediterranean fauna and in a desert fauna that is derived from it. The desert fauna is, however, closer to the bisector than the Mediterranean one. High-spired snails are mainly rock-dwellers, and equidimensional to low-spired snails are bush-dwellers or soil-diggers, with a few rock-dwellers; litter-dwellers are small-sized species that may have either high- or low-spired shells. These results are discussed in adaptive terms. Litter is probably the more primitive of these micro-environments. Many of the small, litter-dwelling snails are ovo-viviparous rather than oviparous, perhaps so as to avoid attacks on the eggs by saprophytic fungi. The shift away from the litter environment is accompanied by a trend to abandon the ovo-viviparous strategy, in favour of oviparity, the snail using its foot to dig into the soil and lay eggs. The conchometric differences between bush-, ground- and rock-dwelling snails may perhaps reflect selective pressure to increase the size of the foot; and constraints of a habitat that consists of narrow interspaces between rocky boulders. Snails that habitually dig into the ground during periods of inactivity, and roam over the ground when active, requires a very large foot and, consequently, a very large-mouthed shell to accommodate it; the result is an equidimensional shell, globose or turbiniform in shape. Snails that climb up vertical vegetation would also require a large foot, and consequently a large-mouthed shell to contain it. A fully globose shell would however be disadvantageous, since it might cause undesired torque. Hence, bush-dwellers tend to be flatter than soil-diggers. Snails that habitually live in rock crevices, and on hard substrata, would not require a very large foot; they would need a narrow shell, both to enable easy manoeuvring through crevices and to reduce torque, the result being a small-mouthed, usually high-spired shell. The classification of land snails into bush-, soil- or rock-dwellers closely follows the taxonomic classification. In those species that depart from the habitat that is typical of their taxonomic group towards another habitat, the shell alters its shape accordingly.
Keywords:Gastropod    shell    shape    land snails    adaptation
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