Data associated with: Going round the twist – An empirical analysis of shell coiling in helicospiral gastropods
The logarithmic helicospiral has been the most widely accepted model of regularly coiled mollusc form since it was proposed by Moseley (1838) and popularised by Thompson (1942) and Raup (1966). It is based on an explicit assumption that shells are isometric and grow exponentially, and an implicit as...
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Zusammenfassung: | The logarithmic helicospiral has been the most widely accepted model of
regularly coiled mollusc form since it was proposed by Moseley (1838) and
popularised by Thompson (1942) and Raup (1966). It is based on an explicit
assumption that shells are isometric and grow exponentially, and an
implicit assumption that the external form of the shell follows the
internal shape, which implies that the parameters of the spiral could,
theoretically, be reconstructed from the external whorl profile. In this
contribution, we show that these assumptions fail on all 25 gastropod
species we examine. Using a dataset of 176 fossil and modern gastropod
shells, we construct an empirical morphospace of coiling using the
familiar three parameters of whorl expansion rate, translation rate, and
rate of increasing distance from coiling axis, plus rate of aperture shape
change, from their best-fit models. We present a case study of change in
shell form through geological time in the austral family Struthiolariidae
to demonstrate the utility of our approach for evolutionary paleobiology.
We fit various functions to the four shell-coiling parameters, to
demonstrate that the best morphological model is not the same for each
parameter. We present a set of R routines that will calculate helicospiral
parameters from sagittal sections through coiled shells and allow workers
to compare models and choose appropriate sets of parameters for their own
datasets. Shell form parameters in the Struthiolariidae highlight a
hitherto-neglected hypothesis of relationship between Antarctic
Perissodonta and the enigmatic Australian genus Tylospira that fits the
biogeographic and stratigraphic distribution of both genera. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.p5hqbzknw |