Werneck Fernanda P, Leite Rafael N, Geurgas Silvia R, Rodrigues Miguel T
Programa de Coleções Científicas Biológicas, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Av. André Araújo 2936, 69060-000, Manaus, AM, Brazil.
Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade de Brasília, 70910-900, Brasília, DF, Brazil.
BMC Evol Biol. 2015 May 23;15:94. doi: 10.1186/s12862-015-0368-3.
Phylogeographic research has advanced in South America, with increasing efforts on taxa from the dry diagonal biomes. However, the diversification of endemic fauna from the semiarid Caatinga biome in northeastern Brazil is still poorly known. Here we targeted saxicolous lizards of the Tropidurus semitaeniatus species group to better understand the evolutionary history of these endemic taxa and the Caatinga. We estimated a time-calibrated phylogeny for the species group based on two mitochondrial and two nuclear genes and jointly estimated the species limits and species tree within the group. We also devoted a denser phylogeographic sampling of the T. semitaeniatus complex to explore migration patterns, and the spatiotemporal diffusion history to verify a possible role of the São Francisco River as a promoter of differentiation in this saxicolous group of lizards.
Phylogenetic analysis detected high cryptic genetic diversity, occurrence of unique microendemic lineages associated with older highlands, and a speciation history that took place during the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition. Species delimitation detected five evolutionary entities within the T. semitaeniatus species group, albeit with low support. Thus, additional data are needed for a more accurate definition of species limits and interspecific relationships within this group. Spatiotemporal analyses reconstructed the geographic origin of the T. semitaeniatus species complex to be located north of the present-day course of the São Francisco River, followed by dispersal that expanded its distribution towards the northwest and south. Gene flow estimates showed higher migration rates into the lineages located north of the São Francisco River.
The phylogenetic and population structures are intrinsically associated with stable rock surfaces and landscape rearrangements, such as the establishment of drainage basins located to the northern and southern distribution ranges. The T. semitaeniatus complex preserved high genetic diversity during range expansion, possibly as a result of frequent long-distance dispersal events. Our results indicate that both the current course of the São Francisco River and its paleo-courses had an important role in promoting diversification of the Caatinga endemic T. semitaeniatus species group.
南美洲的系统地理学研究取得了进展,对干旱对角线生物群落中的分类群的研究力度不断加大。然而,巴西东北部半干旱卡廷加生物群落中特有动物群的多样化情况仍鲜为人知。在此,我们以半带强棱蜥物种组的石生蜥蜴为研究对象,以更好地了解这些特有分类群以及卡廷加的进化历史。我们基于两个线粒体基因和两个核基因估计了该物种组的时间校准系统发育树,并联合估计了该组内的物种界限和物种树。我们还对半带强棱蜥复合体进行了更密集的系统地理学采样,以探索其迁移模式以及时空扩散历史,从而验证圣弗朗西斯科河在这群石生蜥蜴分化过程中可能起到的促进作用。
系统发育分析发现了高度的隐秘遗传多样性、与古老高地相关的独特微特有谱系的存在,以及在上新世 - 更新世过渡期间发生的物种形成历史。物种界定在半带强棱蜥物种组内检测到五个进化实体,尽管支持度较低。因此,需要更多数据才能更准确地定义该组内的物种界限和种间关系。时空分析重建了半带强棱蜥物种复合体的地理起源位于现今圣弗朗西斯科河河道以北,随后扩散使其分布向西北和南部扩展。基因流估计显示向圣弗朗西斯科河以北的谱系的迁移率更高。
系统发育和种群结构与稳定的岩石表面以及景观重排内在相关,例如在分布范围北部和南部建立的流域。半带强棱蜥复合体在范围扩张期间保留了高遗传多样性,这可能是频繁的长距离扩散事件的结果。我们的结果表明,圣弗朗西斯科河的当前河道及其古河道在促进卡廷加特有半带强棱蜥物种组的多样化方面发挥了重要作用。