4.6 Article

A Comprehensive Approach to Detect Hybridization Sheds Light on the Evolution of Earth's Largest Lizards

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 5, Pages 877-890

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syaa102

Keywords

Biogeography; introgression; Komodo dragon; phylogenetic networks; phylogenomics; reticulation; Varanus

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The study revealed evidence of ancient hybridization between the Komodo dragon and sand monitors, with sand monitor species sharing more nuclear alleles with the Komodo dragon than expected, displaying phenotypes intermediate between their closest relatives and the Komodo dragon. Biogeographic analysis indicated co-occurrence of the Komodo dragon and ancestral sand monitors in northern Australia.
Hybridization between species occurs more frequently in vertebrates than traditionally thought, but distinguishing ancient hybridization from other phenomena that generate similar evolutionary patterns remains challenging. Here, we used a comprehensive workflow to discover evidence of ancient hybridization between the Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis) from Indonesia and a common ancestor of an Australian group of monitor lizards known colloquially as sand monitors. Our data comprise >300 nuclear loci, mitochondrial genomes, phenotypic data, fossil and contemporary records, and past/present climatic data. We show that the four sand monitor species share more nuclear alleles with V. komodoensis than expected given a bifurcating phylogeny, likely as a result of hybridization between the latter species and a common ancestor of sand monitors. Sand monitors display phenotypes that are intermediate between their closest relatives and V. komodoensis. Biogeographic analyses suggest that V. komodoensis and ancestral sand monitors co-occurred in northern Australia. In agreement with the fossil record, this provides further evidence that the Komodo dragon once inhabited the Australian continent. Our study show show different sources of evidence can be used to thoroughly characterize evolutionary histories that deviate from a treelike pattern, that hybridization can have long-lasting effects on phenotypes, and that detecting hybridization can improve our understanding of evolutionary and biogeographic patterns.

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