1995
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01059.x
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Cryptic, genetically extremely divergent, polytypic, convergent, and polymorphic taxa in Madagascan Tropidophora (Gastropoda: Pomatiasidae)

Abstract: Madagascar's magnificent and environmentally threatened endemic radiation of the land-snail genus Tropidophora Troschel has recently been classified into three subgenera, 95 species and 142 varieties, based on often subtle conchological variation among small samples; it seems best to ignore temporarily this confusing plethora of names until true biological species and their relationships are better understood. The author's field work in 1990 succeeded in obtaining live Tropidophora from 40 populations distribu… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The absence of conspicuous conchological or anatomical variation does not necessarily indicate a single evolutionary lineage. Cryptic radiation is not uncommon in molluscs (Emberton 1995; Sanjuan et al . 1997; Trewick 1998; Simison & Lindberg 1999; Collin 2000) as well as hidden speciation, where the presence of few distinct evolutionary lineages is veiled by extensive variation in shell morphology (Pfenninger & Magnin 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The absence of conspicuous conchological or anatomical variation does not necessarily indicate a single evolutionary lineage. Cryptic radiation is not uncommon in molluscs (Emberton 1995; Sanjuan et al . 1997; Trewick 1998; Simison & Lindberg 1999; Collin 2000) as well as hidden speciation, where the presence of few distinct evolutionary lineages is veiled by extensive variation in shell morphology (Pfenninger & Magnin 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This scenario of many species being undescribed but other species having been described more than once is common in diverse tropical land snail faunas (Cowie et a1. 1995, Emberton 1995. In many cases, rigorous characterization of species will require study of internal anatomy and analysis of molecular characters, but for most species such studies have not been done.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They concluded that, based on the criteria of estimated species number, monophyly, vagility, predicted character accessibility, and Gondwanan areas of endemism, the best candidates are (a) acavoids (giant, k-selected, 'birds-egg snails'), (b) Boucardicus (minute, top-shaped shells with flamboyant apertures), (c) Reticulapex (minute, discoid shells with complex microsculptures), and (d) streptaxids (small-to-medium-sized, whiteshelled, high-spired carnivores). (Tropidophora Troschel, 1847 -giant operculates that lope 'bipedally' on a divided solewere eliminated because of their extreme, overlapping intraspecific shell variations and their paucity of genital characters: Emberton, 1995a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%