Darwin123 said:
Inbreeding doesn't cause mutations. Inbreeding forces recessive genes to express themselves. However, the gene has to be present in the population in order to be expressed at all. Hence, the damage from inbreeding is often reversible by outbreeding.
This is what I meant. "Mutation" was the wrong term, sorry.
You may be talking about a type of "founders effect" intensified by "Mendelian segregation." If there were a bunch of snails that had evolved to do selfing, and only selfing, then the different lines of snails would become homozygous for one traite or the other (the segregation). Then, if a mass extinction exterminated all lines except the homozygous "torsioned line", then what would be left are snails that only self and are all torsioned.
"Founder's Effect" sounds right. However, I was trying to sketch a situation where the "founders" were forced to self long enough to bring the torsion genes out, but which did not wipe out their ability to have sex with others. They wouldn't be stuck selfing forever. But once they could get back with their own kind, all of them were torted, because this was the first latent tendency waiting to come out in their selfing, just as lower egg production and poor juvenile viability seems to be the first tendency to come out from selfing in the species of snails in the study I linked to. There would have been no normal, untorted ones left to outbreed with because all surviving gastropods would have been forced to self enough times to bring the torsion gene out.
The snails that were forced to self in the study I linked to all developed the same 2 problems: "There was also a significant difference for egg production and juvenile viability over one month; the selfing snails are 94 per cent less fit for these two traits than the outcrossing." I am assuming if we put the offspring of all these snails who had been forced to "self" together, these offspring could resume breeding as normal, fertilizing each other, but that the two bad traits: lower egg production and much poorer juvenile viability, would be expressed in all the successive generations.
The modern pulmonate can self fertilize:
The majority of pulmonates in fresh water are hermaphrodites and are capable of self-fertilization as well as cross-fertilization with other individuals. As a result, any pulmonate entering a new body of water can establish a considerable population of that species in a short time.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/226777/gastropod/35712/Ecology-and-habitats
They do this when they happen to end up where there's no one to mate with. But, as the study demonstrates, even one generation of this can bring bad genes to the fore. I'm just asking you to consider a "founder" gastropod which could self: hundreds of millions of years ago; the original gastropod, the only gastropod game in town. (Gastropods which can't self today would have evolved that later, and yet still be descendants of the "founder" population.) Selfing is an advantage because individuals that happen to become isolated can still produce offspring, and the expression of bad traits will most likely be corrected later when there's a rejoining to the original population. The gastropod disaster, however, throws a monkey wrench into that system by forcing
all the individuals to self for some brief period, and the result is the offspring all express the "bad" genes for torsion.
Since all gastropods tort, even slugs (who have no shell anymore!) it makes more sense in my mind to think they all got it from a "founder" population which could self and was forced to self, and then couldn't correct the resultant deformity with outbreeding, because there were no non-deformed, non-torted members of its kind left to breed with. It's a disadvantageous deformity. In the millions of years since it first appeared all the gastropods have evolved a myriad of excellent accommodations to it, but they don't seem to be able to get rid of it, just as the Hapsburgs would never get rid of their chin if they kept breeding with other Hapsburgs (or outbreeding with Lenos, for that matter).
The alternative to this way of thinking, as far as I can see, is that there were many, many different kinds of gastropods and they all, at different times, and independently of each other, all found a separate advantageous reason to tort such that now, there are none who don't tort. Seems a stretch. Some tort and then de-tort, but the detorsion is a separately evolved correcting mechanism that came later. If you're a gastropod, you tort (according to wiki). If that doesn't trace back to a common "founder" population, I would think we'd have a lot of gastropods today that just never tort at all.
(Speaking of wiki, it describes the mechanism of torsion:
There are two different developmental stages which cause torsion. The first stage is caused by the development of the asymmetrical velar/foot muscle which has one end attached to the left side of the shell and the other end has fibres attached to the left side of the foot and head. At a certain point in larval development this muscle contracts, causing an anticlockwise rotation of the visceral mass and mantle of roughly 90˚. This process is very rapid, taking from a few minutes to a few hours. After this transformation the second stage of torsion development is achieved by differential tissue growth of the left hand side of the organism compared to the right hand side. This second stage is much slower and rotates the visceral mass and mantle a further 90˚. Detorsion is brought about by reversal of the above phases.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(gastropod))
So, the gene, or genes, for torsion seem to simply instruct the veliger to unilaterally tense up one muscle at a certain time. The article implies, as I read it, that the longer, second stage of asymmetrical tissue growth happens naturally as a result of this constriction (meaning, there's no separate genetic instructions for the differential tissue growth). Do you read it this way?
My question was whether torsioning really appeared suddenly. I wonder if it is found in basal gastropods. This is why I asked about rostroconchs. The basal gastropod may have been a rostroconch rather than a full blown snail. So maybe there is a gradual transition to torsioning among the rostroconchs.
One thing that's clear to me from a couple days of reading is that the subject of snails and slugs is an infinity I never suspected. I haven't looked into the subject of the fossil record and I'm content to take the assertion about the suddenness of the appearance of torsion in that paper as fact, mostly just to limit what I have to think about. If you dig up info that really explodes that assertion, then I'll have to think about it.
Regardless, I just googled and found this book:
http://books.google.com/books?id=nm...ed=0CFQQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=tergomyans&f=false
Which says: "We cannot directly observe torsion on fossils, so it is difficult to demonstrate that any fossil is a gastropod…"
In any event, your original question is a damned good one and I'm really just trying to resolve the cognitive dissonance it produced in me in my clumsy, un-rigorous way.