Literature DB >> 23710945

Multilocus phylogeny and Bayesian estimates of species boundaries reveal hidden evolutionary relationships and cryptic diversity in Southeast Asian monitor lizards.

L J Welton1, C D Siler, J R Oaks, A C Diesmos, R M Brown.   

Abstract

Recent conceptual, technological and methodological advances in phylogenetics have enabled increasingly robust statistical species delimitation in studies of biodiversity. As the variety of evidence purporting species diversity has increased, so too have the kinds of tools and inferential power of methods for delimiting species. Here, we showcase an organismal system for a data-rich, comparative molecular approach to evaluating strategies of species delimitation among monitor lizards of the genus Varanus. The water monitors (Varanus salvator Complex), a widespread group distributed throughout Southeast Asia and southern India, have been the subject of numerous taxonomic treatments, which have drawn recent attention due to the possibility of undocumented species diversity. To date, studies of this group have relied on purportedly diagnostic morphological characters, with no attention given to the genetic underpinnings of species diversity. Using a 5-gene data set, we estimated phylogeny and used multilocus genetic networks, analysis of population structure and a Bayesian coalescent approach to infer species boundaries. Our results contradict previous systematic hypotheses, reveal surprising relationships between island and mainland lineages and uncover novel, cryptic evolutionary lineages (i.e. new putative species). Our study contributes to a growing body of literature suggesting that, used in concert with other sources of data (e.g. morphology, ecology, biogeography), multilocus genetic data can be highly informative to systematists and biodiversity specialists when attempting to estimate species diversity and identify conservation priorities. We recommend holding in abeyance taxonomic decisions until multiple, converging lines of evidence are available to best inform taxonomists, evolutionary biologists and conservationists.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23710945     DOI: 10.1111/mec.12324

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  7 in total

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2.  Assessing species boundaries using multilocus species delimitation in a morphologically conserved group of neotropical freshwater fishes, the Poecilia sphenops species complex (Poeciliidae).

Authors:  Justin C Bagley; Fernando Alda; M Florencia Breitman; Eldredge Bermingham; Eric P van den Berghe; Jerald B Johnson
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3.  Coalescent-based species delimitation approach uncovers high cryptic diversity in the cosmopolitan lichen-forming fungal genus Protoparmelia (Lecanorales, Ascomycota).

Authors:  Garima Singh; Francesco Dal Grande; Pradeep K Divakar; Jürgen Otte; Steven D Leavitt; Katarzyna Szczepanska; Ana Crespo; Víctor J Rico; André Aptroot; Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres; H Thorsten Lumbsch; Imke Schmitt
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-05-01       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Conservation genetics of the Philippine tarsier: cryptic genetic variation restructures conservation priorities for an island archipelago primate.

Authors:  Rafe M Brown; Jennifer A Weghorst; Karen V Olson; Mariano R M Duya; Anthony J Barley; Melizar V Duya; Myron Shekelle; Irene Neri-Arboleda; Jacob A Esselstyn; Nathaniel J Dominy; Perry S Ong; Gillian L Moritz; Adrian Luczon; Mae Lowe L Diesmos; Arvin C Diesmos; Cameron D Siler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-08-19       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  A new blue-tailed Monitor lizard (Reptilia, Squamata, Varanus) of the Varanus indicus group from Mussau Island, Papua New Guinea.

Authors:  Valter Weijola; Stephen C Donnellan; Christer Lindqvist
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2016-02-23       Impact factor: 1.546

6.  Recent range expansion of an intermediate host for animal schistosome parasites in the Indo-Australian Archipelago: phylogeography of the freshwater gastropod Indoplanorbis exustus in South and Southeast Asia.

Authors:  Pauline Gauffre-Autelin; Thomas von Rintelen; Björn Stelbrink; Christian Albrecht
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2017-03-06       Impact factor: 3.876

7.  Cryptic genetic diversity is paramount in small-bodied amphibians of the genus Euparkerella (Anura: Craugastoridae) endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic forest.

Authors:  Luciana A Fusinatto; João Alexandrino; Célio F B Haddad; Tuliana O Brunes; Carlos F D Rocha; Fernando Sequeira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-01       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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