Institute of Zoology; University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover; 30559 Hannover; Germany.
Nature Océan Indien; 46 rue des Mascarins; 97429 Petite Ile; La Réunion; France; Laboratoire PVBMT; Université de La Réunion; 97410 Saint-Pierre; La Réunion; France.
Zootaxa. 2023 Jun 29;5311(2):232-250. doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.5311.2.4.
Diurnal dwarf geckos of the genus Lygodactylus are distributed in tropical and subtropical regions and live in highly diverse habitats. The genus currently comprises 79 species and several candidates for new species or subspecies. Most of these taxa occur in Sub-Saharan Africa and Madagascar, with only two described species in South America. Although the main center of diversity of Lygodactylus currently is Africa, the genus probably has a Malagasy origin, followed by two or three independent transoceanic dispersal events between Madagascar and Africa and one trans-Atlantic dispersal from Africa to South America. A few species colonised islands in the Western Indian Ocean belonging to the Zanzibar Archipelago and to the Îles Éparses. Here we examined L. grotei pakenhami from Pemba Island, L. insularis from Juan de Nova, and L. verticillatus from Europa Island to clarify their taxonomic status and their origin. Concerning L. grotei pakenhami and L. insularis, preceding studies pointed to a relation to species of the African L. capensis group. In contrast, L. verticillatus on Europa Island is considered to be conspecific with Malagasy populations. Therefore, we conducted a phylogenetic study of the African L. capensis group and the Malagasy L. verticillatus group, and examined color pattern, selected morphological characters and two mitochondrial markers (ND2 for African and 16S rRNA for Malagasy Lygodactylus). Lygodactylus grotei pakenhami from Pemba and L. grotei from mainland Africa cannot be distinguished by their scalation, but their reciprocal monophyly suggested by mitochondrial DNA, conspicuously different coloration (both in adults and hatchlings) and their high genetic distances (16.3% in ND2) support the hypothesis that these taxa represent two distinct species. Consequently, we elevate L. grotei pakenhami to species level, as Lygodactylus pakenhami Loveridge, 1941. Lygodactylus pakenhami is endemic to Pemba Island which was possibly separated from the African mainland during the late Miocene or Early Pliocene (6 million years ago). The simplest explanation for the existence of L. pakenhami on Pemba is vicariance. A recent, human-mediated transportation is excluded, as the molecular data clearly indicate a longer period of isolation. Lygodactylus insularis has been supposed to be related to the taxa 'capensis' or 'grotei'. However, it is impossible to discern the relationship of L. insularis, L. capensis and L. grotei by means of scalation or coloration alone. Our molecular phylogenetic analyses reveal that L. insularis is embedded within the L. capensis group, clearly indicating its African origin. The single gene (ND2) as well as the multigene analyses fully support a closer common origin of L. insularis and L. capensis than of L. insularis and L. grotei. However, the position of L. insularis within the clade formed by L. insularis, L. nyaneka, L. capensis sensu stricto and six L. aff. capensis groups is not clearly resolved. Lygodactylus insularis is endemic on Juan de Nova Island, an old low elevation atoll. That all L. insularis mitochondrial sequences are very similar to each other and together form a monophyletic lineage is in agreement with the hypothesis of a single dispersal event to the island. For the L. verticillatus population from Europa Island our mitochondrial data suggest close relationships to conspecific samples from the coastal regions of south-western Madagascar. As we found no relevant morphological or genetic differences between the insular and the Malagasy populations of L. verticillatus, and no remarkable genetic variation within the monophyletic lineage on Europa, we suggest a single, very recent dispersal event, perhaps human-mediated. Although the genus Lygodactylus colonised Africa, islands in the Gulf of Guinea, South America and some islands in the Western Indian Ocean, it seems-compared to other lizard genera-to be only moderately successful in transoceanic long-distance dispersal.
日行守宫蜥蜴属的日行守宫分布于热带和亚热带地区,生活在高度多样化的生境中。该属目前包括 79 个物种和几个新种或亚种的候选物种。这些分类群大多分布在撒哈拉以南非洲和马达加斯加,南美洲只有两个描述的物种。尽管日行守宫蜥蜴属的主要多样性中心目前在非洲,但该属可能起源于马达加斯加,随后发生了两到三次在马达加斯加和非洲之间的跨洋扩散事件,以及一次从非洲到南美洲的跨大西洋扩散事件。少数物种在属于桑给巴尔群岛和埃斯帕里斯群岛的西印度洋岛屿上定居。在这里,我们检查了来自奔巴岛的 L. grotei pakenhami、来自胡安·德·诺瓦的 L. insularis 和来自欧罗巴岛的 L. verticillatus,以澄清它们的分类地位和起源。关于 L. grotei pakenhami 和 L. insularis,之前的研究表明它们与非洲 L. capensis 组的物种有关。相比之下,欧罗巴岛上的 L. verticillatus 被认为与马达加斯加种群是同种的。因此,我们对非洲的 L. capensis 组和马达加斯加的 L. verticillatus 组进行了系统发育研究,并检查了颜色模式、选择的形态特征和两个线粒体标记物(非洲的 ND2 和马达加斯加的 16S rRNA)。来自奔巴岛的 L. grotei pakenhami 和来自非洲大陆的 L. grotei 不能通过它们的鳞片来区分,但它们的线粒体 DNA 所暗示的互惠单系性、明显不同的颜色(成年和孵化幼体都有)以及它们的高遗传距离(ND2 为 16.3%)支持了这些分类群代表两个不同物种的假设。因此,我们将 L. grotei pakenhami 提升到物种水平,即 Lygodactylus pakenhami Loveridge,1941。Lygodactylus pakenhami 是奔巴岛的特有种,可能是在中新世或上新世晚期(600 万年前)与非洲大陆分离的。在奔巴岛上存在 L. pakenhami 的最简单解释是隔离分化。最近的人类介导的运输被排除在外,因为分子数据清楚地表明了更长的隔离期。Lygodactylus insularis 被认为与“capensis”或“grotei”有关。然而,仅凭鳞片或颜色无法辨别 L. insularis、L. capensis 和 L. grotei 之间的关系。我们的分子系统发育分析表明,L. insularis 嵌入在 L. capensis 组内,清楚地表明其非洲起源。单基因(ND2)和多基因分析都完全支持 L. insularis 和 L. capensis 的共同起源比 L. insularis 和 L. grotei 的起源更为密切。然而,L. insularis 在由 L. insularis、L. nyaneka、L. capensis 狭义和六个 L. aff. capensis 组形成的分支中的位置尚未明确解决。Lygodactylus insularis 是胡安·德·诺瓦岛的特有种,这是一个古老的低海拔环礁。所有 L. insularis 的线粒体序列都非常相似,并且共同形成一个单系谱系,这与单个扩散事件到该岛的假说一致。对于来自欧罗巴岛的 L. verticillatus 种群,我们的线粒体数据表明与马达加斯加西南沿海地区的同种样本密切相关。由于我们没有发现 L. verticillatus 的岛屿和马达加斯加种群之间存在相关的形态或遗传差异,也没有在欧罗巴岛上的单系谱系内发现显著的遗传变异,因此我们建议发生了一次非常近期的、可能是人为介导的扩散事件。尽管日行守宫蜥蜴属的物种已经在非洲、几内亚湾的岛屿、南美洲和西印度洋的一些岛屿上定居,但与其他蜥蜴属相比,它似乎在跨洋远距离扩散方面的成功程度较低。