4.5 Article

Diversification and biogeographical history of Neotropical plethodontid salamanders

Journal

ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 175, Issue 1, Pages 167-188

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/zoj.12271

Keywords

Central America; homoplasy; Mexico; morphology; new genus; range evolution; systematics; taxonomy; tribe Bolitoglossini

Categories

Funding

  1. UC MEXUS-CONACyT
  2. US National Science Foundation [DEB 1026396]
  3. DGAPA-UNAM
  4. US National Science Foundation AmphibiaTree grant [EF-0334939]
  5. Museum of Vertebrate Zoology
  6. [PAPIIT-UNAM IN209914]
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology [1026393] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The Neotropical bolitoglossine salamanders represent an impressive adaptive radiation, comprising roughly 40% of global salamander species diversity. Despite decades of morphological studies and molecular work, a robust multilocus phylogenetic hypothesis based on DNA sequence data is lacking for the group. We estimated species trees based on multilocus nuclear and mitochondrial data for all major lineages within the bolitoglossines, and used our new phylogenetic hypothesis to test traditional biogeographical scenarios and hypotheses of morphological evolution in the group. In contrast to previous phylogenies, our results place all Central American endemic genera in a single clade and suggest that Central America played a critical role in the early biogeographical history of the group. The large, predominantly Mexican genus Pseudoeurycea is paraphyletic, and analyses of the nuclear data place two lineages of Pseudoeurycea as the sister group of Bolitoglossa. Our phylogeny reveals extensive homoplasy in morphological characters, which may be the result of truncation or alteration of a shared developmental trajectory. We used our phylogenetic results to revise the taxonomy of the genus Pseudoeurycea.(c) 2015 The Linnean Society of London

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