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Journal ArticleDOI

The Genetics of Some Morphs and Varieties of Cepaea nemoralis (L.)

TLDR
Murray’s finding that the hyalozonate gene when homozygous pales shell colour as well as removing the lip and banding pigment is confirmed; faint pink or yellow-white shells homozygotes for hyalozoneate may be genetically faint pinkor pale pink; the strong linkage between it and shell colour previously suggested is confirmed, but crossovers are recorded.
Abstract
The following segregants of shell colour are described: pale brown, faint brown, faint pink, yellow-white. Faint pink is dominant to dark and pale yellow and recessive to pale pink. Murray’s finding that the hyalozonate gene when homozygous pales shell colour as well as removing the lip and banding pigment is confirmed; faint pink or yellow-white shells homozygous for hyalozonate may be genetically faint pink or pale pink. Deep pink hyalozonates exist and transmit their phenotype to their offspring; in these the paling effect is not noticeable. Shells with no bands but a strip of fascialbate opaque material in the position for bordering the middle band are genetically mid-banded. The condition is due to a multifactorial suppression of the pigmented band. Spread-banded is described in the five-banded form as well as the m id-banded; the strong linkage between it and shell colour previously suggested is confirmed, but crossovers are recorded. White lip (with normally pigmented bands) is recessive to normal lip, linked to the locus for shell-colour, and allelic to hyalozonate. The normal lip/white lip heterozygote appears to be palelipped, but the degree of pallor is modified by the presence of yellow or pink shell colour. White lip, when homozygous, may reduce the intensity of shell colour in some cases, as does hyalozonate. Hyalozonate is shown to be linked to the banding locus, which itself is strongly linked to that for shell colour. Orange-banded is complementary to hyalozonate, not allelic to it as is the very similar form lurida described by Murray in Cepaea hortensis . A form of the var. punctata producing only traces of bands and occasionally a definite punctate band is described, which is linked to the shell colour locus and dominant to normal bands. This and the form figured by Lang and by Taylor with well-developed punctate bands (the segregation of which from normal bands is confirmed) may well be alleles. A segregation of medium grey to very pale body is described, with medium grey dominant to pale. It appears to be unlinked to shell colour, banding and mid-banded.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Polymorphism in Cepaea: A Problem with Too Many Solutions?

TL;DR: The most important lesson to be gained from an intensive study of the Cepaea polymorphism is that many types of evolutionary force act upon it and that their relative importance varies between different polymorphic loci, or even when the same locus is studied in different populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Supergenes and their role in evolution.

TL;DR: It is argued that the supergene concept remains relevant and is more testable than ever with modern molecular methods, conclusively showing that balanced polymorphism can be maintained at multiple coadapted and tightly linked elements.
Journal ArticleDOI

A two–stage model for Cepaea polymorphism

TL;DR: A simple simulation shows that migration coupled with selection which fluctuates but is not centripetal, may retain polymorphism for sufficiently long to account for the patterns the authors see today.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Hoxnian Interglacial deposits at Woodston, Peterborough

TL;DR: The Woodston Beds have a diversity of fossils which allows their palaeoecological relationships to be examined, and their age in the Hoxnian Interglacial of the Middle Pleistocene is proposed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Area Effects in Cepaea

TL;DR: The snails Cepaea nemoralis and C. hortensis are remarkable for an extensive and stable polymorphism involving the colour and banding of the shell, but it is not clear that the area effects are caused by some form of selection, but the topography, geology and vegetation of the Marlborough Downs gives no clue to what this could be for banding.
Journal ArticleDOI

New Data on the Genetics of Polymorphism in the Snail Cepaea Nemoralis L.

TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to present further information from the breeding program being carried out at Oxford and to consider the significance of the dominance relations revealed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of natural selection on body colour in the land snail Cepaea nemoralis

TL;DR: It is found that here again variatior is dominated by natural selection and is not random.