I am pleased to report that the second paper in what I expect will be a continuing series on Goodrichian taxon shift in the North American Pleuroceridae has recently reached formal publication [1]. In this most recent installment, the team of Dillon, Jacquemin and Pyron uses a combination of genetic and shell morphometric techniques to demonstrate that the specific nomina acuta (Rafinesque 1824) and pyrenellum (Conrad 1839) are junior synonyms of Pleurocera canaliculata (Say 1821). As “Pleurocerus acutus” was designated the type of the genus in ICZN Opinion #1195 of 1981 [2], this finding will be of more than the usual taxonomic interest.
Our analytical approach was patterned after that used by
Dillon (2011) on the Pleurocera clavaeformis populations of East Tennessee
[3]. We used allele frequencies at nine
polymorphic allozyme loci to show that two populations of nominal P. acuta (from
Indiana and Kentucky) and one population of nominal P. pyrenellum (from north
Alabama) were each more genetically similar to the P. canaliculata population
immediately downstream than any of the six populations was to any nominal
conspecific. We then used landmark-based
morphometics to explore one of these “Goodrichian” shifts in greater detail,
the historically important acuta-to-canaliculata transition found in the Wabash
River of Indiana.
On at least two occasions Calvin Goodrich himself expressed
doubts about the distinction between P. acuta and P. canaliculata, specifically
mentioning the Wabash populations in 1937 [4].
So we borrowed 18 lots of historically-collected Wabash Pleurocera from
the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology [5] and documented a significant
correlation between shell robustness (as measured using relative warp analysis)
and river size at point of collection, as estimated by catchment area. The seven museum lots bearing more slender,
high-spired shells (collected above Wabash River kilometer RK500) were
identified by Goodrich as acuta, and the six lots bearing broader, heavier
shells collected downstream from RK400 were identified as canaliculata. Goodrich recognized a mixture of the two
nominal species in the five lots collected in the 100 km immediately downstream
from RK518, where the Tippecanoe River joins the Wabash, essentially doubling
the catchment area (sites 8 - 12 in the map below).
Situations such as we document in the RK400-500 region
probably explain why Calvin Goodrich, the man for whom Goodrichian taxon shift
was named, did not synonymize acuta under canaliculata himself back in
1939. The two nominal “species” sometimes
seem to mix and retain a degree of distinctiveness. The phenomenon appears even more dramatically
in places where very small streams communicate directly with large mainstem
rivers, such as that marked “12” in the map below. It is not unusual to find snails bearing very
slender, high-spired shells washed down into much broader, more robustly-shelled
populations inhabiting the main river at spots such as this, looking for all
the world like a pair of bona fide, reproductively-isolated species.
Way back in 2007 I defined "Goodrichian Taxon
Shift," as “intraspecific variation in freshwater gastropod shell
morphology along an environmental cline of such magnitude as to prompt the
erroneous recognition of multiple nominal taxa” [6]. The phenomenon was conceived as narrowly
applicable to freshwater snails, as Calvin Goodrich himself focused his own
research.
But after some soul-searching, my colleagues and I have
decided to broaden the concept and coin a new term for it. So in our paper just published, we propose
the term “cryptic phenotypic plasticity,”
which we define as “intrapopulation morphological variation so extreme as to
prompt an (erroneous) hypothesis of speciation.” We think that the sort of insight Calvin
Goodrich brought to the study of pleurocerid snails in the 1930s and 1940s has
the potential to make a contribution to the understanding of evolutionary
processes beyond our small community of freshwater gastropod cognoscenti, even
in the present day.
Goodrich himself was
strongly influenced by the research of A. E. Ortmann on unionid mussels. Ortmann described a correlation between river
size and shell robustness way back in 1920, on the basis of which he sank quite
a few unionid taxa into synonymy [7].
And Ortmann credited the idea to Wilson & Clark (1914) [8]. So in some sense it might not be fair to
continue to call the phenomenon “Goodrichian” anything, as we forward cryptic
phenotypic plasticity onward to evolutionary science as a whole.
The extent to which cryptic
phenotypic plasticity may occur in the biotas of land and sea remains to be seen,
however. It seems unlikely to me that
marine and terrestrial environments manifest themselves as variably to the
populations that inhabit them as fresh waters, at least for the molluscan fauna
with which I have any professional familiarity.
Were the Nucella (“dog whelk”) populations of the Pacific intertidal an
(historic) example of cryptic phenotypic plasticity? What component of the baroque taxonomy of
Cerion populations in the Bahamas might be attributable to ecophenotypic plasticity
in their shells [9]? Our colleagues with
expertise in environments such as these are hereby invited to take notice.
Notes
[1] Dillon, R. T., Jr., S. J. Jacquemin & M. Pyron
(2013) Cryptic phenotypic plasticity in
populations of the freshwater prosobranch snail, Pleurocera canaliculata. Hydrobiologia 709: 117-127. [html] [pdf]
[3] Dillon, R. T., Jr. (2011) Robust shell phenotype is a local response to stream size in the genus Pleurocera. Malacologia 53: 265-277. [pdf]
[4] Goodrich, C. (1937)
Studies of the gastropod family Pleuroceridae – VI. Occas. Pprs. Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich. 347: 1 –
12.
Goodrich, C. (1939)
Pleuroceridae of the St. Lawrence River basin. Occas. Pprs. Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich. 404: 1 –
4.
[5] The UMMZ was Goodrich’s home institution from 1924 to
1944. All the pleurocerid lots curated
during this period would have been identified by him, if not collected by him
personally. See “The Legacy of Calvin
Goodrich.” [23June07]
[6] Goodrichian Taxon
Shift [20Feb07]
[7] Ortmann actually did this backwards. In his (1918) “The Nayades of the Upper
Tennessee Drainage, with Notes on Synonymy and Distribution” (Proc Am Phil Soc
57: 522) he wrote, “A large number of the ‘species’ described by Lea… and of
those listed by Lewis… and subsequently described by various authors…are mostly
synonyms.” And as evidence he cited, “a
rule…that one and the same shell assumes different shapes in the large rivers
and in small streams and headwaters, a rule the existence of which will be
shown elsewhere.” Then in 1920 Ortmann
published his “Correlation of shape and station in freshwater mussels
(naiades)” (Proc Am Phil Soc 59: 269-312).
[8] Wilson, C. B.
& H. W. Clark (1914) The mussels of
the Cumberland River and its tributaries.
Bur. of Fisheries 781: 1 – 63.
[9] I thought
Woodruff & Gould pretty much answered this question back in the 1980s (eg,
Biol. J. Linn. Soc 14: 389-416). But
Harasewych (Nautilus 126: 119-126) seems not to have been paying attention.
I puzzeled by your statement that "Pleurocera acuta is among the best known of the North American freshwater gastropods, first described from Lake Erie by Rafinesque (in Blainville, 1824)." I looked at Blainville 1824 and see nothing with respect to a description. I would think P. acutus in Blainville is a nomen nudem.
ReplyDeleteKevin - I'm not sure I understand it either! Rafinesque's formal description of P. acuta wasn't actually published until 1831. Here I'm just parroting "Part 1" of ICZN Opinion #1195, which states "the author of Pleurocerus acutus is Rafinesque in Blainville 1824." I think the commissioners HAD to give Rafinesque the 1824 description, or otherwise the name "acuta" would have been preoccupied in 1831. And hence unavailable to serve as the type of the genus.
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