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1 June 2002 Iterative changes in Lake Pannon Melanopsis reflect a recurrent theme in gastropod morphological evolution
Dana H. Geary, Andrew W. Staley, Pál Müller, Imre Magyar
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Abstract

Iterative evolutionary changes are of special interest because they imply that the recurring morphological changes had a cause that also repeated itself and might therefore be possible to uncover. We describe a set of iterative morphological changes in melanopsid gastropods from the ancient, long-lived Lake Pannon. First in the Pannonian Age, and again in the Pontian Age approximately three million years later, a smooth-shelled ancestor gave rise to a shouldered descendant. In both cases, the morphological change was probably coincident with a shift from habitats just outside the lake (e.g., rivers and streams) to habitats within the lake itself. Many other convergent examples exist in which a smooth-shelled river dweller is closely related to a shouldered and/or ribbed lacustrine snail. The frequency of this type of morphological change suggests that it has an adaptive basis; response to differing predators or hydrodynamic conditions seem the most plausible explanations, but the functional nature of these morphological changes remains unknown.

Dana H. Geary, Andrew W. Staley, Pál Müller, and Imre Magyar "Iterative changes in Lake Pannon Melanopsis reflect a recurrent theme in gastropod morphological evolution," Paleobiology 28(2), 208-221, (1 June 2002). https://doi.org/10.1666/0094-8373(2002)028<0208:ICILPM>2.0.CO;2
Accepted: 1 January 2002; Published: 1 June 2002
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