Abstract
In 1985 we resurveyed the sites on the Marlborough Downs in southern England at which Cain and Currey in 1960/61 sampled Cepaea snails and thence introduced the term 'area effects' to describe large areas of uniform morph frequency. Some sites no longer harboured Cepaea and at others the species composition had changed, with a general spread of Cepaea hortensis at the expense of Cepaea nemoralis. The majority, however, permitted comparison of morph frequencies between the two surveys. In C. nemoralis, we detected a significant overall decrease in the frequency of the brown morph and estimate selection as 5-9% per generation. There was no apparent change in frequencies of banded morphs. In C. hortensis we detected a significant overall increase in the frequency of unbanded shells (1-3% selection per generation) and an almost significant decrease in the frequency of fusions within the banded class. There was insufficient colour polymorphism in C. hortensis to allow analysis of colour morph frequencies. These changes - all in the direction of reduced absorption of solar energy - resemble others detected in both species at other localities in southern England. Possible explanations include large-scale climatic effects and changes in vegetation. (C) 1998 The Linnean Society of London.
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CITATION STYLE
H.Cowie, R., & Jones, J. S. (1998). Gene frequency changes in Cepaea snails on the Marlborough Downs over 25 years. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 65(3), 233–255. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8312.1998.tb01141.x
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