Journal article

The fossil record of freshwater Gastropoda - a global review


Authors listNeubauer, Thomas A.

Publication year2024

Pages177-199

JournalBiological Reviews

Volume number99

Issue number1

ISSN1464-7931

eISSN1469-185X

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/brv.13016

PublisherWiley


Abstract
Gastropoda are an exceptionally successful group with a rich and diverse fossil record. They have conquered land and freshwater habitats multiple times independently and have dispersed across the entire globe. Since they are important constituents of fossil assemblages, they are often used for palaeoecological reconstruction, biostratigraphic correlations, and as model groups to study morphological and taxonomic evolution. While marine faunas and their evolution have been a common subject of study, the freshwater component of the fossil record has attracted much less attention, and a global overview is lacking. Here, I review the fossil record of freshwater gastropods on a global scale, ranging from their origins in the late Palaeozoic to the Pleistocene. As compiled here, the global fossil record of freshwater Gastropoda includes 5182 species in 490 genera, 44 families, and 12 superfamilies over a total of similar to 340 million years. Following a slow and poorly known start in the late Palaeozoic, diversity slowly increased during the Mesozoic. Diversity culminated in an all-time high in the Neogene, relating to diversification in numerous long-lived (ancient) lakes in Europe. I summarise well-documented and hypothesised freshwater colonisation events and compare the patterns found in freshwater gastropods to those in land snails. Furthermore, I discuss potential preservation and sampling biases, as well as the main drivers underlying species diversification in fresh water on a larger scale. In that context, I particularly highlight the importance of long-lived lakes as islands and archives of evolution and expand a well-known concept in ecology and evolution to a broader spectrum: scale-independent ecological opportunity.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleNeubauer, T. (2024) The fossil record of freshwater Gastropoda - a global review, Biological Reviews, 99(1), pp. 177-199. https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.13016

APA Citation styleNeubauer, T. (2024). The fossil record of freshwater Gastropoda - a global review. Biological Reviews. 99(1), 177-199. https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.13016



Keywords


AMPULLARIID GASTROPODSAQUATIC MOLLUSKSBIVALVE MOLLUSKScolonisationECOLOGICAL OPPORTUNITYLATE OLIGOCENENANNING BASINnon-marine MolluscaNONMARINE MOLLUSKSpalaeogeographyPRESERVATION


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:58