“…There are several studies on land gastropods, but also on butterflies, beetles, terrestrial isopods, scorpions, frogs and lizards, and also plants (Beerli et al, 1996;Sfenthourakis, 1996, Douris et al, 1998, 2007Chatzimanolis et al, 2003;Parmakelis et al, 2003Parmakelis et al, , 2005Parmakelis et al, , 2006aPoulakakis et al, 2003Poulakakis et al, , 2005aBittkau & Comes, 2005;Kasapidis et al, 2005;Klossa-Kilia et al, 2006;Lymberakis et al, 2007;Poulakakis & Sfenthourakis, 2008;Papadopoulou et al, 2009;Lymberakis & Poulakakis, 2010), which suggest that the present distributions of most terrestrial Aegean taxa were shaped primarily through vicariant phenomena that resulted from the complex geological history of the eastern Mediterranean and particularly that of the Aegean archipelago. Nevertheless, dispersal over sea or through occasional land bridges was also involved (see Douris et al, 1998;Dennis et al, 2000;Kasapidis et al, 2005).…”