4.2 Article

Biogeographic anomaly or human introduction: a cryptogenic population of tree skink (Reptilia: Squamata) from the Cook Islands, Oceania

Journal

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 100, Issue 2, Pages 318-328

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2010.01437.x

Keywords

colonization; Emoia samoensis species group; Fiji; human-mediated introduction; phylogeography; Samoa; Scincidae; Solomon Islands; Tonga; Vanuatu Archipelago; waif dispersal

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB 0408010, DEB 0445213, DBI 0400797]
  2. EPSCoR Fellowship
  3. Graduate Women in Science
  4. American Society of Ichthyologists Herpetologists
  5. Society for the Study of Amphibians Reptiles
  6. Sigma Xi (LSU chapter)
  7. University of North Dakota
  8. LSU Museum of Natural Science BioGrads
  9. National Museum of Natural History programs

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Archaeological and molecular data have revealed that the present day faunas of many island groups in Melanesia, Polynesia, and Micronesia are not representative of the biodiversity generated within this region on an evolutionary timescale. Erroneous inferences regarding the mechanisms of speciation and the significance of long distance dispersal in shaping the present diversity of these island systems have resulted from this incomplete diversity and distributional data. The lizard fauna east of Samoa has been suggested to derive entirely from human-mediated introductions, a distribution congruent with biogeographic patterns for other Pacific species. Distinguishing between introduced populations and those that result from natural colonization events is difficult, although molecular data provide a useful means for elucidating population history and identifying the likely sources of introductions. We use molecular data (1726 bp of mitochondrial DNA and 286 bp of nuclear DNA) to evaluate a population of arboreal lizards from the Cook Islands and to determine whether this arboreal skink population is the sole endemic component of the lizard fauna east of Samoa or the result of human-mediated introduction. (C) 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 100, 318-328.

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