Cepaea

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Cepaea
White-lipped snail Cepaea hortensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Order: Stylommatophora
Family: Helicidae
Subfamily: Helicinae
Tribe: Allognathini
Genus: Cepaea
Held, 1838[1]
Type species
Helix nemoralis
Linnaeus, 1758
Synonyms
  • Cepaea (Cepaea) Held, 1838
  • Helix (Tachea) W. Turton, 1831 (Invalid: junior homonym of Tachea Fleming, 1822 [Aves])
  • Hystrionica Scudder, 1882

Cepaea is a genus of large air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod molluscs in the family Helicidae. The shells are often brightly coloured and patterned with brown stripes. The two living species in this genus, C. nemoralis and C. hortensis, are widespread and common in Western and Central Europe. In North America, C. hortensis is native on the northeast coast, but both species have been introduced elsewhere, and they are also spreading further east in Europe.[2] Both have been influential model species for ongoing studies of genetics and natural selection. Like many Helicidae, these snails use love darts during mating.[3]

A comparison between Cepaea hortensis (left) and Caucasotachea vindobonensis (right)

For a long time, four living species were classified in the genus Cepaea. However, molecular phylogenetic studies suggested that two of them should be placed in the genera Macularia and Caucasotachea, which are not immediate relatives of either Cepaea or each other:[4][5]

Several other fossil species have been described.[6]

Interspecific relations

The range of C. hortensis extends further north than that of C. nemoralis in Scotland and Scandinavia and it is the only one of the two species in Iceland and the only one native to North America.[7][8][9] Likewise in the Swiss Alps C. hortensis is found as high as 2050 m, but C. nemoralis only up to 1600 m.[10] Conversely, the southern edge of the range lies further north in C. hortensis; unlike C. nemoralis it does not occur in Italy, and in Spain it has a more restricted distribution (in the north-east corner).[11][12]

Where the ranges overlap C. hortensis prefers cooler sites with longer and damper vegetation. But the two species often co-occur at a site, in which situation the densities of both affect each other's growth, fecundity and mortality. However, they differ somewhat in their behaviour: C. hortensis is more active at lower temperatures, aestivates higher on the vegetation and is more diurnal, although this appears to be independent of whether the other species is present or not.[13][14]

When given no choice of partner in the laboratory, the two Cepaea species can form hybrids, which will backcross with the parental species, but the fertility is very low.[15]

Shell polymorphism

References

Further reading

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