Note to users. If you're seeing this message, it means that your browser cannot find this page's style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing, and what you can do to make your experience of our site the best it can be.

Site Tools

  • AAAS
  • Subscribe
  • Feedback

Site Search

Search Advanced

Science 9 November 1973:
Vol. 182. no. 4112, pp. 546 - 552
DOI: 10.1126/science.182.4112.546

Articles

Ecological Genetics and Natural Selection in Molluscs

Climatic selection has an important effect on some patterns of gene distribution in snail populations

J. S. Jones 1

1 Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, University of London, 8 Hunter Street, London WClN 1BP

Polymorphic snails of the genus Cepaea have been widely used for research in ecological genetics. Natural selection by selective predation is important in controlling morph frequencies in some populations of C. nemoralis in England. The importance of environmental selection in affecting other patterns of local genetic differentiation of population structure (area effects) is a matter of controversy. Some authors emphasize divergent evolution of whole gene pools between area effects, while others feel that climatic selection acting on individual loci is important.

Analysis of 500,000 C. nemoralis snails from throughout Europe shows that there is a strong positive association between gene frequencies at the shell color locus and mean summer temperature, but that no climatic correlations are obvious at other loci. Another species, C. vindobonensis, which has a much simpler system of polymorphism than does C. nemoralis, was investigated in Yugoslavia, in a region where there is known to be intense microclimatic differentiation because of the accumulation of cold air in frost hollows. There was a striking tendency for snails with lightly pigmented shell bands to be found in places with a warm microclimate. Physiological and behavioral experiments demonstrate that this is due primarily to differential energy absorption from sunshine by the different shell phenotypes. As in C. nemoralis, other C. vindobonensis phenotypes show no detectable association with the environment. It is possible that genes whose frequencies cannot be related to environmental selection may have evolved strong linkage interactions with other genes in the population's gene pool. Selection by the ecological environment and the genetic environment may therefore both be important in controlling the genetic structure of snail populations.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Heat tolerance in Mediterranean land snails: histopathology after exposure to different temperature regimes.
N. Dittbrenner, R. Lazzara, H.-R. Kohler, C. Mazzia, Y. Capowiez, and R. Triebskorn (2009)
J. Mollus. Stud. 75, 9-18
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
Temperature-related diversity of shell colour in the intertidal gastropod Batillaria.
O. Miura, S. Nishi, and S. Chiba (2007)
J. Mollus. Stud. 73, 235-240
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »



To Advertise     Find Products


Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)