LAND SNAILS ON PORTO-SANTO - ADAPTIVE AND NONADAPTIVE RADIATION

Citation
Rad. Cameron et al., LAND SNAILS ON PORTO-SANTO - ADAPTIVE AND NONADAPTIVE RADIATION, Philosophical transactions-Royal Society of London. Biological sciences, 351(1337), 1996, pp. 309-327
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
09628436
Volume
351
Issue
1337
Year of publication
1996
Pages
309 - 327
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8436(1996)351:1337<309:LSOP-A>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
A survey has been made of the land snail fauna of Porto Santo, Madeira n archipelago. Porto Santo is an isolated island about 12 km long by 5 km wide. The fauna is exceptionally species-rich and characterisied b y radiations of species in several families, especially the Helicidae. Sixty-five samples from the mainland and five offshore islets yielded 56 species, 84% of them endemic, with a mean of 11.5 species per site , and marked regional differentiation in faunal composition. A given s ite produces on average only approximately one fifth of the number of species possible, equivalent to a value for Whittaker's index of diver sity of 4.5. Patterns of localization occur on the peaks to the east a nd west of the island, with numerous cases of replacement by congeneri c and morphologically similar species. Local areas have assemblages of species differing in shell size and shape, which probably exploit dif ferent niches, the pattern in one area paralleling that in others. The low-lying sandy areas which separate these areas are now unfavourable to many endemic species; those which do occur in them tend to have is land-wide distributions. Morphological variation in such species appea rs to have ecological rather than geographical correlates. We conclude that adaptive responses have occurred, but that much of the species r ichness can be interpreted as non-adaptive, that is, due to allopatric divergence in isolation by species which retain similar niches. Even on so small a land mass the topography is such that for many land moll uscs it represents a cluster of refuges intermittantly connected throu gh impermanent and often unfavourable sandy environments, on each of w hich evolution proceeds independently. Differences in distribution pat terns between families probably arise because they evolved at differen t times in the island's history. These results are compared with those from snail faunas in other parts of the world, some of which are simi lar to them.