QUANTIFYING GEOGRAPHIC VARIABILITY OF A LINEAGE: THE GEOMETRIC MORPHOSPACE OF MULINIA
Each valve was digitally imaged and x-y coordinates for fifteen landmarks and pseudolandmarks were acquired. Procrustes method was used to simultaneously fit the landmark points and derive shape coordinates that are invariant in respect to variations in size, rotation, and position of specimens. Tangent coordinates were used to derive principle component ordination to compare the overall shape differences between shells from different regions, and size was estimated using shell length and centroid size.
Preliminary results based on 789 specimens of M. congesta from 16 localities suggest that geographic morphospace varies significantly and there is a latitudinal trend based on the amount of specimens misclassified during a jackknife crossvalidation. For specimens originally from Virginia, 9% of them were misplaced into North Carolina, while none were misclassified with specimens from Florida. For Florida specimens, 8.33% were misclassified as Georgia, while 2% were misclassified as Virginia specimens. The amount of variation between geographic regions is comparable to the amount interspecific variation between the two species, when 68 M. laterialis specimens were analyzed. The geographic variability in morphology of Mulinia exceeds notably environmental variability and may be comparable in level to interspecific variability within the genus. Geographic gradients may thus exert influence on morphology that is comparable to morphological effects of speciation.