“…Although they were later synonymised to Fruticicola hispida (Germain, 1929), the number of species morphologically resembling T. hispidus is far from being agreed (Anderson, 2005;Duda et al, 2014;Welter-Schultes, 2012). Moreover, recent studies have provided an even more confusing picture, revealing that T. sericeus/hispidus constitutes a complex of morphologically similar but genetically divergent species in the Sarine valley in Swiss Western Prealps (Dépraz et al, 2009) and the snails morphologically resembling T. sericeus sometimes form genetically separate clades (Duda et al, 2014;Proćków et al, 2014Proćków et al, , 2017c or conversely, two morphologically different shells assigned to T. hispidus and T. sericeus do not form phylogenetically distinct clades (Duda et al, 2014;Proćków et al, 2013); hence, these snails are often described as the T. hispidus complex (Kruckenhauser et al, 2014). Furthermore, T. hispidus and T. sericeus appeared to be phenotypically plastic and showed no interbreeding constraints (Proćków et al, 2017a).…”