Abstract

Variation in the shell coiling, or chirality, of land snails provides an opportunity to investigate the potential for “single‐gene” speciation, because mating between individuals of opposite chirality is believed not possible if the snails mate in a face‐to‐face position. However, the evidence in support of single‐gene speciation is sparse, mostly based upon single‐gene mitochondrial studies and patterns of chiral variation between species. Previously, we used a theoretical model to show that as the chiral phenotype of offspring is determined by the maternal genotype, occasional chiral reversals may take place and enable gene flow between mirror image morphs, preventing speciation. Here, we show empirically that there is recent or ongoing gene flow between the different chiral types of Japanese Euhadra species. We also report evidence of mating between mirror‐image morphs, directly showing the potential for gene flow. Thus, theoretical models are suggestive of gene flow between oppositely coiled snails, and our empirical study shows that they can mate and that there is gene flow in Euhadra. More than a single gene is required before chiral variation in shell coiling can be considered to have created a new species.

Highlights

  • Most snails have a right-handed spiraling shell, rare “mirror-image” individuals have a shell that coils to the left

  • A problem is that gene flow is fundamentally antagonistic to this process because it is expected to homogenize divergence at individual loci, and through recombination, randomize associations between the different loci contributing to reproductive isolation (Felsenstein 1981; Coyne and Orr 2004; Gavrilets 2004; Servedio 2009)

  • We used a theoretical model to show that occasional chiral reversals may take place and enable gene flow between mirror image snail-shell morphs

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Summary

Introduction

Most snails have a right-handed spiraling shell, rare “mirror-image” individuals have a shell that coils to the left This curious inherited condition has attracted attention because the genitals of mirror image snails are on different sides of the head, and so mating is difficult or impossible. A problem is that gene flow is fundamentally antagonistic to this process because it is expected to homogenize divergence at individual loci, and through recombination, randomize associations between the different loci contributing to reproductive isolation (Felsenstein 1981; Coyne and Orr 2004; Gavrilets 2004; Servedio 2009).

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