REGULATION OF SPIRAL COILING IN THE TERRESTRIAL GASTROPOD SPHINCTEROCHILA - AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF THE ROAD-HOLDING MODEL

Citation
Ag. Checa et al., REGULATION OF SPIRAL COILING IN THE TERRESTRIAL GASTROPOD SPHINCTEROCHILA - AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF THE ROAD-HOLDING MODEL, Journal of morphology, 235(3), 1998, pp. 249-257
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Anatomy & Morphology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03622525
Volume
235
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
249 - 257
Database
ISI
SICI code
0362-2525(1998)235:3<249:ROSCIT>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
Hutchinson's ('89) road-holding model states that spiral ornaments of the snail shell (keels and low-curvature areas) dictate the growth pat h of the subsequent whorl, which in turn gives the signal for attachme nt of the next whorl. Experiments were performed with two species of t he terrestrial snail Sphincterochila in order to test the role of the external keel in determining the correct coiling of successive turns. Experiments substituted a ridge made of silicone for the keel. This ri dge ran either (1) abapical or (2) adapical of the original keel. In m ode (1), subsequent growth continued by taking the false keel as the a dapical limit of the whorl. In only very few instances of mode (2) did the whorls extend incipiently slightly adapical of the path of the or iginal keel. Our results confirm that the keel is an important referen ce far the coiling strategy of the snail, although the keel itself pro bably does not constitute the reference, but rather the two flat ramps into which the keel divides the outer lip of the aperture. (C) 1998 W iley-Liss, Inc.