4.7 Article

Molecular evidence for hybridization between two Australian desert skinks, Ctenotus leonhardii and Ctenotus quattuordecimlineatus (Scincidae: Squamata)

期刊

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
卷 53, 期 2, 页码 368-377

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.06.020

关键词

Introgression; Phylogeography; Speciation; Species tree; Nuclear markers; Phylogeny; Incomplete lineage sorting

资金

  1. Mario Einaudi Center at Cornell University
  2. EAPSI
  3. Western Australia Department of Environment and Conservation [SF0004654]
  4. [NSF-OSIE- 0612855]
  5. [NSF-DEB-0814277]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Australian scincid lizards in the genus Ctenotus constitute the most diverse vertebrate radiation in Australia. However, the evolutionary processes that have generated this diversity remain elusive, in part because both interspecific phylogenetic relationships and phylogeographic structure within Ctenotus species remain poorly known. Here we use nucleotide sequences from a mitochondrial locus and two nuclear introns to investigate broad-scale phylogeographic patterns within Ctenotus leonhardii and C. quattuor-decimlineatus, two geographically widespread species of skinks that were found to have a surprisingly close genetic relationship in a previous molecular phylogenetic study. We demonstrate that the apparent close relationship between these ecologically and phenotypically distinct taxa is attributable to mitochondrial introgression from C. quattuordecimlineatus to C. leonhardii. In the western deserts, Ctenotus leonhardii individuals carry mtDNA lineages that are derived from C. quattuordecimlineatus mtDNA lineages from that geographic region. Coalescent simulations indicate that this pattern is unlikely to have resulted from incomplete lineage sorting, implicating introgressive hybridization as the cause of this regional gene-tree discordance. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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