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J. Moll. Stud. (2000), 66, 131–142 © The Malacological Society of London 2000 LOCAL AND REGIONAL DIVERSITY IN SOME AEGEAN LAND SNAIL FAUNAS R. A. D. CAMERON 1 , M. MYLONAS 2 and K. VARDINOYANNIS 2 1 Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN. UK. Natural History Museum of Crete, University of Crete, P.O. Box 2208, 71409 Irakleio, Greece (Received 5 May 1999; accepted 1 July 1999) 2 ABSTRACT Land snail faunas from maquis and phrygana sites on the islands of Naxos and Crete, and from the eastern Peloponnese were sampled to determine the relationships between local (site) and regional diversities. Mean site diversities are similar in each region. In both the Peloponnese and Crete, however, these represent a much lower proportion of total diversity than is the case for forest faunas from more northerly parts of Europe. The small island of Naxos has more uniform faunas. Some of this between-site diversity is a product of habitat heterogeneity, but most is a product of small-scale biogeographical differentiation. Despite the short (c. 250km) distances between regions, the faunas of each region differ far more than do faunas from forests in northern Europe spread over much greater distances. Nearly 80% of species recorded were found in only one region. These results are compared with those from elsewhere, and discussed in the context of the high diversity of snail faunas in the mediterranean area generally. INTRODUCTION The relationships between local and regional species diversities for any group of animals or plants has both theoretical and practical (conservation) implications (Cornwell and Lawton, 1992; Srivastava, 1999). Comparisons within a single habitat-type ( diversity, Cody, 1986) are particularly fruitful, exposing small-scale biogeographical differentiation, and contributing to understanding of the role of interspecific competition in limiting local diversity (Srivastava, 1999). In a review of species diversity in local and regional land mollusc faunas, Cameron (1995) showed that there were regional differences in the relationship between the two, which could be related to the environmental histories of each region and to the ecological tolerances and powers of dispersal of the species concerned. Thus in northern temperate regions, where mollusc faunas are a product of immigration since the last glaciation, regional diversities are low, even though some site diversities are high by world standards (Solem, 1984). In contrast, there are some tropical and subtropical regions where climatic fluctuations have not removed whole faunas, but have caused contractions and expansions of local refugia with opportunities for allopatric speciation, especially in stenotypic and poorly dispersing species: the non-adaptive radiation of Gittenberger (1991). No data sets from Mediterranean habitats were available for that review. The high regional diversities of land molluscs in Mediterranean countries are well-documented, despite incomplete accounts of many faunas (Bank, Falkner, Gittenberger, Hausdorf, Proschwitz and Ripken, 1998), but their relationship to local diversities has not been formally addressed. We report here on a survey in the Aegean area, involving three regions within it: the islands of Naxos and Crete, and the south-eastern part of the Peloponnese (Figure 1). Sampling concentrated on the major semi-natural habitat complex of the area, maquis and phrygana. The investigation was prompted by the occurrence of a spectacular non-adaptive radiation in the area, that of the genus Albinaria (Clausiliidae) (Gittenberger, 1991; Douris, Cameron, Rodakis and Lecanidou, 1998). THE HABITATS AND THE REGIONS Outside of cultivated areas, maquis and phrygana today constitute the predominant vegetation types of the Aegean area below the subalpine zone (c. 1500m). Maquis is dominated by shrubs: woody plants generally capable of growing into trees if not prevented by fire or grazing. Phrygana is dominated by undershrubs: 132 R.A.D. CAMERON, M. MYLONAS & K. VARDINOYANNIS Figure 1. A sketch map of the area studied. The approximate positions of sample sites on Crete and in the Eastern Peloponnese are shown on the main map; those on Naxos are shown enlarged. AEGEAN LAND SNAILS woody species which are always small, usually unpalatable and relatively short-lived (Rackham and Moody, 1996). The two habitats frequently intermingle in small-scale mosaics determined mainly by soil properties and moisture regime, and there are intergradations between them. Fire and changing grazing pressures create irregular cycles of vegetational change in maquis, so that at one extreme, cover may be less than in most phrygana, while at the other it becomes scrub woodland with a closed canopy. Phrygana is more stable, but can be destroyed by burning (Rackham and Moody, 1996). Sampling in each region included both maquis and phrygana. A few scrub woodland sites were sampled at the extreme of the maquis range, and one subalpine site was sampled on Crete. Data from the last are excluded from most analyses. In all regions, sampling was restricted to sites on hard limestone, which provides calcium for snails and a relative abundance of shelter under rocks. Some sites included abandoned cultivations; maquis has spread, and become more mature over the last 150 years as a result of the abandonment of marginal land (Rackham and Moody, 1996). There is an ongoing debate about the nature of the vegetation in the Aegean area before the start of agriculture. Pre-Minoan Crete held significantly more woodland than it does today, but remains of plants typical of maquis and phrygana are found in interstadials of the last glaciation (Friedrich, 1978). The pattern of climatic change over the Quaternary and late Tertiary is not entirely clear, but there were no extremes sufficient to extinguish the molluscan fauna, which includes many restricted endemics now found in maquis and phrygana (Vardinoyannis, 1994). Glacial maxima are associated with significantly lower winter temperatures than today (Gittenberger and Goodfriend, 1993; McCoy, 1980; Por, 1989), but some elements of modern Mediterranean vegetation can be found in the late Pliocene, when dry summers replaced a moister subtropical climate (Suc, 1984). Figure 1 shows the area of study, and the approximate location of sample sites. While the area is now extensively fragmented by the sea, it was part of a continuous land-mass in the early Miocene. Marine transgressions (11–9 My ago) established a midAegean channel which separated all three study regions from Asia Minor and the Dodecanese (Creutzberg, 1963; Verginis, 1976; Meulenkamp, 1985). While the Peloponnese was only intermittently separated from the rest of the mainland thereafter, Crete has been isolated from other regions since the end of the Messinian salinity crisis (c. 5.5 My ago), and effectively for longer. It was broken up into a number of smaller islands during the Pliocene, but tectonic uplift of more than 700m gave it approximately its present form in the Pleistocene (Dermitzakis, 1987; summary in Vardinoyannis, 1994). Naxos has been intermittently connected to other Cycladan islands during the Pleistocene, and certainly separated from the mainland far more recently than did Crete (Dermitzakis, 1987; Mylonas, 1982). 133 METHODS AND MATERIAL At each site, an area of c. 1 hectare was delimited, and within it three people searched for molluscs for about one hour. At least one person searching had extensive experience of collecting in this environment. In addition, c. 5 litres of litter and soil were collected from at least five locations within the site for examination in the laboratory. Samples were made in late April and early May 1993. Although some slugs were found, they are excluded from analysis as this method of sampling is inefficient; several visits would be needed to find a high proportion of those present. This sampling protocol involves a larger area and more effort than has been used in many comparable studies (Cameron 1973), to compensate for the patchy distributions and good concealment of many species in this habitat. At each site, notes were made on the availability of refuges (judged by the disposition and quantity of boulders and crevices in rocks), on the habitat type (forest, maquis, phrygana), and on signs of previous cultivation, especially evidence of terracing and of relict cultivated olive-trees. Species identifications were made by M. Mylonas and K. Vardinoyannis. These include as yet undescribed or unassigned forms which were clearly distinct from all other species found in the survey. A conservative classification has been used; a number of genera need reassessment, which will probably increase the number of species involved here. Nomenclature follows Vardinoyannis (1994), and designation of species as anthropophile follows Mylonas (1982 and 1984). All material collected is held in the Natural History Museum of Crete. RESULTS The Appendix gives details of site locations and characteristics, and the matrix of sites and species for each region. 90 species were found, of which three occurred only in the subalpine site on Crete. Amongst the maquis/phrygana series the range of species per site is 8–18. Table 1 shows for each region, and overall, the total number of species found (S), the mean number of species per site (), and two indicators of the relationship between local and regional diversity: Whittaker’s I (S/) (Cody, 1986; Cameron, 1995), and the proportion of species occurring in at least half the sites in each region and in at least 30% overall. It also shows the effect of separating anthropophilic species from the rest (see below). Amongst regions, there are only small differences in mean number of species per site, and much overlap between regions in individual site diversities. Naxos has a much smaller total array (S) than the other two regions, and therefore a lower value for Whittaker’s I and a higher 134 R.A.D. CAMERON, M. MYLONAS & K. VARDINOYANNIS Table 1. Number of species found per region (S), mean number per site (), Whittaker’s Index (I), and the percentage of species occurring in at least 50% (regions) or 30% (overall) of sites examined, by region and in total, and distinguishing between native and anthropophilic species. The lower percentage occurrence for the overall comparisons takes account of the marked regional differentiation. S I % in 50% NAXOS n 12 Native Anthropophilic TOTAL 21 6 27 8.50 3.25 11.75 2.5 1.8 2.3 28 67 37 CRETE n 12 Native Anthropophilic TOTAL 37 9 46 10.00 3.86 13.86 3.7 2.3 3.3 14 44 20 E. PELOPONNESE n 11 Native Anthropophilic TOTAL 37 6 43 11.00 1.36 12.36 3.4 4.4 3.5 19 17 19 OVERALL n 35 Native Anthropophilic TOTAL 77 10 87 9.80 2.87 12.67 7.9 3.5 6.9 8 60 14 Table 2. Distribution of species by regions both overall and after separating into native and anthropophilic categories. Percentages given in brackets. Region No of Species No in Region only Anthropophilic Naxos Crete E. Peloponnese Overall 6 9 6 10 0 (0) 2 (22) 1 (18) 3 (30) 2 3 1 3 (40) 4 4 4 4 (40) Native Naxos Crete E. Peloponnese Overall 21 37 37 77 11 (52) 28 (76) 25 (68) 64 (83) 5 4 7 8 (11) 5 5 5 5 (6) All species Naxos Crete E. Peloponnese Overall 27 46 43 87 11 (41) 30 (65) 26 (60) 67 (77) 7 7 8 11 (13) 9 9 9 9 (10) proportion of frequent species. The overall value of I is much higher than for any region on its own, and Table 2 shows that nearly 80% of all species found were found in only one region, and only 10% in all three. Table 3 presents these data differently, giving Jaccard Indices of similarity between the faunas of each region, contrasting them with values of the same index obtained by comparing the fauna of some Scottish forests with those from similar forests at varying distances across northern Europe. Despite the shorter distances, the Aegean faunas No in 2 Regions No in 3 Regions show a much greater degree of differentation. Some species of snail survive well in cultivated areas and are spread passively by agricultural activity (Mylonas, 1984). Tables 1 and 2 show that such anthropophilic species are more widely distributed, and reduce differences between sites both overall and within Crete and Naxos. Although the anthropophilic species found in Peloponnesan samples are, with one exception, also found in at least one of the other regions, they are infrequent in the sites, and contribute to difference rather than diminishing AEGEAN LAND SNAILS it. There are no significant relationships between the number of anthropophilic species and others at each site (the very weak relationships are all positive). Overall, the presence of anthropophilic species makes only marginal differences to estimates of between site and region diversity. Of the various recorded features of each site, only altitude and presence of past cultivation appear to have consistent effects on diversity (Table 4). Sites above 700m are poorer than those below (the subalpine site, not included, Table 3. Jaccard Indices of similarity for the recorded faunas in this study (maquis/phrygana), and for sets of deciduous forest faunas from northern Europe compared with one such set from eastern Scotland (Cameron and Greenwood, 1992). Index Median distance km NAXOS WITH: CRETE E. PELOPONNESE 0.20 0.23 250 250 CRETE WITH: E. PELOPONNESE 0.17 250 EASTERN SCOTLAND WITH: DERBYSHIRE, ENGLAND 0.77 SUSSEX, ENGLAND 0.56 S. SWEDEN 0.59 N. GERMANY 0.57 N. ITALY 0.27 400 650 1000 1000 1500 135 was the poorest of all). On Naxos and Crete, sites with previous cultivations are poorer in non-anthropophilic species than those without. There are no consistent differences between sites from maquis and phrygana, nor with our estimates of the abundance of refuges. A few species appear to be confined to the highest sites in the main series on Crete. Removing the highest site reduces the value of Whittaker’s I for non-anthropophilic species to 3.2. The levels of similarity between the three regions are much greater at generic level than at that of species (Table 5). On Crete, over half the genera encountered are represented by more than one species in our samples, and by 10 species in the case of Albinaria. On Naxos, only a third of genera are so represented, and there is only one species of Albinaria. The Peloponnesan samples do not repeat this pattern; although Albinaria is represented by six species, only a fifth of all genera found have more than one species in the samples, and there are more genera present than on Crete (28 to 22). The restricted number of sites exaggerates the generic differences between regions: thus of fourteen genera found on Naxos or the Peloponnese but not in our samples on Crete, eight are known to occur on the island (Vardinoyannis, 1994). DISCUSSION The primary aim of this study was to establish the levels of diversity, variation in species composition within a single habitat (Cody, Table 4. The effect of previous cultivation and altitude on mean number of species. No sites on Naxos were above 600m, and only one site on the Peloponnese showed signs of previous cultivation. Mean no of species per site No of sites ‘Native’ Anthropophilic All Species NAXOS Cultivated Uncultivated 4 8 6.5 9.5 3.25 3.25 9.75 12.75 CRETE Cultivated Uncultivated Above 700m Below 600m 4 8 3 9 8.75 10.63 7.60 10.78 4.50 3.5 2.33 4.33 13.25 14.13 10.00 15.11 PELOPONNESE Above 700m Below 600m 3 8 8.67 12.12 1.00 1.50 9.67 13.62 136 R.A.D. CAMERON, M. MYLONAS & K. VARDINOYANNIS Table 5. Distribution of numbers of genera by regions, and the Jaccard Indices of Similarity for genera between regions. Region NAXOS CRETE PELOPONNESE OVERALL JACCARD BETWEEN PELOPONNESE CRETE No. of Genera 19 22 28 36 NAXOS 0.52 0.46 In one region 1 5 8 14 In two regions 7 6 9 11 In three regions 11 11 11 11 PELOPONNESE – 0.42 1986), both within and between the regions concerned. With the exception of within Naxos variation, indices of diversity are substantially higher than those obtained in comparable studies in the northern half of Europe, or at the same latitudes in N. America (Cameron 1995). Site diversities do not vary much between areas, and it is the variation in S which accounts for varying values of I within and between regions. As in other studies (Cameron 1995), differences between recorded faunas can arise in many ways. Sampling error, the failure to find all species in a site, will inflate differences between sites. Although the habitats studied here do present particular sampling problems, these were compensated for by increasing size of area and sampling effort. A conservative approach has been taken on classification. In some genera there may be more species in our samples than we have recognised, as for example in Mastus on Crete (Maassen, 1995). Our classification will tend to minimise I. Besides these procedural issues, using I to estimate diversity depends on the uniformity of the habitat between sites. Any differences introduce an element of diversity (differences between habitats, Cody, 1986). There are slight effects of altitude and previous cultivation, but no evidence of consistent effects related to the specific vegetation type. At least on Crete, altitudinal changes in maquis vegetation are not apparent below 1000m (Rackham and Moody, 1996), and the maquis habitat goes through cyclical changes. Its fauna must be those species which can survive all stages of these cycles, some of which resemble phrygana. There are no areas of more stable and favourable habitats around from which species can invade maquis entering more favourable phases. The habitats studied are affected by human activity. Although data are scarce it appears that this activity has caused very few extinctions of snail species (Mylonas, unpublished). Human activity has spread a number of species, however, including many which are now abundant and conspicuous (Mylonas, 1984). This is clearly reflected in the low I values for anthropophilic species on Crete and Naxos. Data from the Peloponnese does not fit this pattern: Anthropophilic species were rarely encountered, and more detailed study is needed. It is a reasonable, but unproven conclusion that differences between sites and regions were greater before the start of agriculture. Although there are not modern systematic accounts for the whole area, it is known that countries bordering the northern shore of the Mediterranean have richer faunas than countries further north. Thus Italy has at least 400 species (Cossignani and Cossignani, 1995), and a recent estimate, probably conservative, gives Greece 825 species and subspecies, of which threequarters are endemic (Bank et al 1998). This contrasts with 126 species in the British Isles, or 116 in Norway and Sweden combined (von Proschwitz, 1994). This greater diversity is partly due to the greater range of habitable environments available, with great altitudinal gradients and marked local contrasts in rainfall regimes. The evidence from this study, and from the occurrence of large numbers of restricted endemics (Bank et al 1998) shows that microgeographical differentiation within single habitat types also makes a very substantial contribution to this diversity. In the Aegean area, some of this differentiation can be attributed to the long-term fragmentation of land-masses caused by Tertiary tectonics (Mylonas 1982, Vardinoyannis 1994). It does not account for all of it. Detailed studies on the speciose genus Albinaria for example, reveal patterns on a much smaller scale, and phylogeographical analysis suggests that this is a more recent process (Douris et al 1998). Retreats into, and expansions from numerous local refugia in response to Plio-Pleistocene AEGEAN LAND SNAILS climatic fluctuations provide a plausible explanation, which has a parallel in semi-arid northwest Australia (Cameron, 1992) and perhaps more widely in the seasonal tropics (Stanisic, 1994; Tattersfield, 1998). Mountain zones sufficiently far from the blanket ice sheets of glacial maxima also show such microallopatric effects, as for example in Pyrenean Chondrinidae (Gittenberger 1984). In his review of global land snail diversity, Solem (1984) showed that there was no general trend for site diversities () to increase towards the tropics. Later work (de Winter and Gittenberger, 1998) has demonstrated that very high local diversities can be found in the tropics, but many estimates in good habitats are much lower, and not higher than those of more temperate regions (eg. Tattersfield 1998). The site diversities recorded here are in the middle range by world standards, and they are not as high as those recorded for many forests in areas wiped clean by Pleistocene glaciations (Cameron, 1995). They probably represent the most favourable environment of any size available to snails in our regions. At first sight, this lack of correlation between local and regional diversities appears to suggest that local diversity may be limited by competition (Srivastava, 1999). In the context of land molluscs, however, such a conclusion may be premature: other evidence for competition is sparse, and the lack of any negative effect on the number of other species of the presence of anthropophiles does not suggest that it is strong. Critically, caution is needed in determining what is regionally available in a group with poor powers of dispersal; a species present at one end of Crete may not be available at the other in the sense intended by Srivastava. Species/area curves for land molluscs in mediterranean environments may be a lot steeper than those normally found in withinprovince studies (Rosenzweig, 1995; Cameron, in preparation). Two of the regions studied here are presently islands, and the third, in the Peloponnese, is nearly so. Theory suggests that small islands will have reduced faunas relative to comparable areas of mainland (MacArthur and Wilson, 1967), and that the niche-breadths of the species present on them may be greater (Rosenzweig, 1995). There is little sign of this in our study: sites on Naxos have a slightly lower mean number of species per site, but there is great overlap with sites in the other regions. Naxos appears to lack microgeographical differentiation in its snail fauna; although the smallest of our regions it is much larger than the much 137 more isolated island of Porto Santo in the Madeiran archipelago, which has both microgeographical differentiation between parts of the island and levels of species diversity in phrygana-like habitats very similar to those found here (Cameron, Cook and Hollows, 1996). Island size may have to be very small before the effects of extinction rates become significant. Nevertheless, there are particular cases where the islands lack a species found on the mainland, and appear to have no remotely plausible ecological equivalent: the very large Helicid Codringtonia codringtoni occurs in the Peloponnese, but not in the islands. Maquis and phrygana/garrigue habitats are widespread throughout the mediterranean region. Carefully collated data from different parts of it could provide valuable evidence as to how mollusc faunas are structured (Srivastava, 1999). ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to thank Drs S. Giokas and J. Botsaris for help with collecting and identification. R.A.D.C. was supported by a Royal Society Travel Grant. REFERENCES BANK, R.A., FALKNER, G., GITTENBERGER, E., HAUSDORF, B., PROSCHWITZ, T VON, & RIPKEN, T.E.J. 1998. Biodiversity of the western palaeactic region as exemplified by continental Mollusca. In: Abstracts, World Congress of Malacology, Washington DC (R. Bieler and P.M. Mikkelsen, eds.), 25. Unitas Malacologica, Chicago. CAMERON, R.A.D. 1973. Some woodland mollusc faunas from southern England. Malacologia, 14: 355-370. CAMERON, R.A.D. 1992. Land snail faunas of the Napier and Oscar Ranges, Western Australia: Diversity, distribution and speciation. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 45: 271-286. CAMERON, R.A.D. 1995. 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Vicariantists and dispersalists among the Chondrininae (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Chondrinidae). In: World-wide Snails, (A. Solem and A.C. van Bruggen, eds.), 56-69. E.J. Brill, Leiden. GITTENBERGER, E. 1991. What about non-adaptive radiation? Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 43, 263-272. GITTENBERGER, E. & GOODFRIEND, G.A. 1993. Land snails from the last glacial maximum on Andikithira, southern Greece, and their palaeoclimatic implications. Journal of Quaternary Science, 8: 109116. MAASSEN, W.J.M. 1995. Observations on the genus Mastus from Crete (Greece) with descriptions of twelve new species (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Bulimulidae). Basteria, 59: 31-64. MACARTHUR, R.H. & WILSON, E.O. 1967. The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. MCCOY, F. 1980. Climatic change in the eastern Mediterranean area during the past 240,000 years. In: Thera and the Aegean World, 2, (C. Doumas, ed.). 79-100. Thera Foundation, London. MEULENKAMP, J. E. 1985. Aspects of the late Cenozoic evolution of the Aegean region. In: Geological Evolution of the Mediterranean Basin, (J.D. Stanley and F.C. Wezel, eds.), 307-321. Springer, Berlin. MYLONAS, M. 1982. The zoogeography and ecology of the terrestrial molluscs of the Cyclades. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, University of Athens. (Greek with English summary). MYLONAS, M. 1984. The influence of man: a special problem in the study of the zoogeography of terrestrial molluscs on the Aegean islands, Greece. In: World-wide Snails, (A. Solem and A.C. van Bruggen, eds.), 249-260. E.J. Brill, Leiden. POR, F.D. 1989. The legacy of Tethys: an aquatic biogeography of the Levant. Kluwer, Dordrecht. PROSCHWITZ, T. VON. 1994. Zoogeographical studies on the land Mollusca of the province of Dalsland (S.W. Sweden). Acta Regiae Societatis Scientarum et Litterarum Gothoburgensis, Zoologia, 15: 1-152. RACKHAM, O. & MOODY, J. 1996. The making of the Cretan landscape. Manchester University Press, Manchester. ROSENZWEIG, M.L. 1995. Species diversity in space and time. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. SOLEM, A. 1984. A world model of land snail diversity and abundance. In: World-wide Snails, (A. Solem, and A.C. van bruggen, eds.), 6-24. E.J. Brill, Leiden. SRIVASTAVA, D.S. 1999. Using local-regional richness plots to test for species saturation: pitfalls and potentials. Journal of Animal Ecology, 68: 1-16. STANISTIC, J. 1994. The distribution and patterns of species diversity of land snails in eastern Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 36: 207-214. SUC, J-P. 1984. Origin and evolution of the Mediterranean vegetation and climate in Europe. Nature, 307: 429-432. TATTERSFIELD, P. 1998. Patterns of diversity and endemism in East African land snails, and the implications for conservation. In: Molluscan conservation: A strategy for the 21st Century; Journal of Conchology Special Publication No. 2, (I.J. Killeen, M.B. Seddon and A.M. Holmes, eds.), 77-86. Conchological Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Cardiff. VARDINOYANNIS, K. 1994. Biogeography of land snails in the south Aegean island archipelago. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, University of Athens. (Greek with English summary). VERGINIS, S. 1976. Die paläogeographische Entwicklung des Kykladischen Massivs (Alte Egeide), und ein Vergleich mit den Alpinem Raum. Etairia Kikladikon Meleton, 1974-76: 1-35. WINTER, A.J. DE & GITTENBERGER, E. 1998. Land snail diversity of a square kilometer of rainforest in southwestern Cameroon. In: Abstracts, World Congress of Malacology, Washington, DC. (R. Bieler and P.M. Mikkelsen, eds.), 84. Unitas Malacologica, Chicago. AEGEAN LAND SNAILS APPENDIX Section (a) gives details of sites. For refuges, M many, E enough/intermediate, F few. For habitats, M maquis, P phrygana, F forest, SA subalpine. For cultivation, no sign of cultivation, evidence of previous cultivation, R ruins on 139 site. Altitudes were not recorded on Naxos, but all sites were below 600m. Section (b) lists the species found at each site, tabulated by region. Asterisks indicate anthropophilic species. Nomenclature and the sequence of names follows Vardinoyannis (1994). Note that Site 13 on Crete, in the subalpine zone, is excluded from most analyses. (a) Site Details NAXOS Sample No Location 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 10 11 12 Avionitsa Avionitsa Agiasos Agiasos Agia Apollonas Mesi Moutsouna Kinidaros Danakos Chimaru Kalanto Refuges M E E E E M M M E M E M Habitat M P M P M P M P M m M M Cultivation CRETE Sample No Location 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 19 10 11 12 *13 Stalida-Mohos Katohori-Thrypti Anogia Kritsa-Katharo Spinalonga Giouhtas Amoudara Mt Skloka Krousounas Orne below Omalos Matala above Omalos Refuges Habitat Cultivation E E M E E E E M M F E E E M P P M M M M P M P F M SA Refuges Habitat Cultivation E M E E F E F F F E E M M F M M F/M M P P M F R Altitude m 500 500 100 800 0 400 0 100 800 500 1000 50 1600 EASTERN PELOPONNESE Sample No Location 11 12 13 14a 14b 15 16 17 18 19 10 Xeropidago Leonidio-Kosmas Kosmas Loggastra Loggastra Parori Apidea 11 km Monemvasia Monemvasia Sparti Tripolis Agios Petros Altitude m 100 100 1100 550 550 300 100 100 50 700 900 140 R.A.D. CAMERON, M. MYLONAS & K. VARDINOYANNIS (b) Species Records NAXOS Samples Species 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 *Helix aspersa Helix figulina Helix godetiana *Eobania vermiculata Helicigona bacchica Helicigona amorgia *Monacha rothi Monacha sp Cernuella ionica Cernuella syrensis *Trochoidea cretica Trochoidea didyma Zonites pergranulata *Vitrea contracta Vitrea clessini *Oxychilus hydatinus Oxychilus samius Albinaria coerulea Mastus turgidus Granopupa granum Rupestrella philippii Pyramidula chorismenostoma Cecilioides acicula Pagodulina sparsa Truncatellina sp Orculella critica Lauria cylindracea Number of species 17 11 15 11 8 9 9 10 14 13 10 15 AEGEAN LAND SNAILS 141 CRETE Samples Species 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 *Helix aspersa *Helix aperta *Eobania vermiculata Lindholmiola barbata Metafruticola lecta Metafruticola noverca Metafruticola nicosiana Metafruticola pellita *Monacha rothi Monacha syriaca Trochoidea mesostena Trochoidea sp Helicopsis bathytera Helicopsis sp Carpathica cretica *Eopolita protensa Vitrea clessini *Vitrea contracta *Oxychilus hydatinus Oxychilus spratti Oxychilus superfluus Lindbergia orbicularis Lindbergia pageti Lindbergia pseudoillyrica Poiretia dilatata Cecilioides acicula *Rumina decollata Albinaria cretensis Albinaria eburnea Albinaria hippolyti Albinaria idaea Albinaria corrugata Albinaria maltzani Albinaria moreletiana Albinaria praeclara Albinaria terebra Albinaria teres Mastus turgidus Mastus olivaceus Mastus cretensis Pleurodiscus sudensis Granopupa granum Rupestrella philippii Rupestrella rhodia Orculella critica Orculella sp Truncatellina rothi Cochlostoma cretense Number of species 12 18 16 11 15 18 11 16 8 14 11 12 5 142 R.A.D. CAMERON, M. MYLONAS & K. VARDINOYANNIS EASTERN PELOPONNESE Samples Species 1 2 3 4a 4b 5 6 7 8 9 10 *Helix aspersa Helix cincta Helix figulina Codringtonia codringtoni *Eobania vermiculata Lindholmiola lens Helicigona sphaeriostoma Monacha messenica *Caracollina lenticula Chilostoma sp Cernuella syrensis Candidula sp Helicopsis sp Poiretia dilatata Punctum pygmaeum Cecilioides acicula Daudebardia rufa Zonites parnonensis Zonites graecus *Vitrea contracta Vitrea demiobasis Vitrea shuetti *Oxychilus hydatinus Oxychilus samius *Rumina decollata Albinaria discolor Albinaria schuchi Albinaria messenica Albinaria voithi Albinaria grisea Albinaria arcadica Mastus turgidus Mastus pupa Chondrula bergeri Granopupa granum Rupestrella rhodia Rupestrella philippii Orculella critica Pogodulina sp Pyramidula chorismenostoma Acanthinula aculeata Truncatellina rothi Cochlostoma tesselatum Number of species 12 16 11 14 11 14 13 12 15 8 9