Slow and steady saves the race: molecular and morphological analysis of three new cryptic species of Iberus land snails from the Iberian Peninsula
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Liétor, José; Tudela, Antonio R.; Jódar, Pedro A.; Jowers, Michael Joséph; Moreno Rueda, GregorioEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Gastropoda Helicidae Iberus
Date
2024-03-12Referencia bibliográfica
Liétor, J., Tudela, A.R., Jódar, P.A. et al. Slow and steady saves the race: molecular and morphological analysis of three new cryptic species of Iberus land snails from the Iberian Peninsula. Org Divers Evol (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13127-024-00640-3
Sponsorship
Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Granada/CBUA; Postdoctoral “María Zambrano” fellowshipAbstract
The Iberian Peninsula constitutes a diversity hotspot with a high number of endemisms, where the land snail genus Iberus
is likely the best example. Despite this, its species diversity is still debated as it holds several cryptic species. In the present
paper, we use molecular evidence (mitochondrial DNA cytochrome oxidase subunit I) to clarify the position of I. ortizi and
three new cryptic species that are described herein: I. giennensis, I. axarciensis and I. antikarianus spp. nov. For this, we
sampled 281 sampling points to delimitate a comprehensive geographic mapping of these species. Moreover, we carried out
a comprehensive morphometric analysis based on 3205 shells. Our findings show that, morphologically, the three described
species overlap in the form of their shells, their morphologies being very similar to other close species with nearby distributions
(I. ortizi, I. angustatus and I. marmoratus loxanus). Still, all these species are well-defined by genetic distances, but
display allopatric distributions, suggesting that they evolved by allopatric speciation as a consequence of biogeographic
isolation. Hence, our findings show insights into the evolution of land snails in southeastern Spain, with implications for their
conservation, given that our exhaustive sampling shows that the three species described here have very limited distribution
ranges, especially I. antikarianus sp. nov. Our study, moreover, implies an integrated approach to the study of the evolution
of land snails, including the sampling of the complete geographic area occupied by the genus, genetic analysis to delimit
the actual species range, as well as morphometric analyses to understand the phenotypic differentiation and adaptations of
the three new species.