4.7 Article

The evolutionary history of an accidental model organism, the leopard gecko Eublepharis macularius (Squamata: Eublepharidae)

Journal

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107414

Keywords

Aridification; Divergence dating; Eublepharis macularius; Historical biogeography; Pet trade

Funding

  1. Department of Atomic Energy [2012/21/06/BRNS]
  2. Department of Science and Technology [DST SR/SO/AS-57/2009]
  3. Ministry of Environment and Forests, Govt. of India
  4. National Science Foundation USA [NSF EF 1241885, 13-0632, NSF DEB 1657662]
  5. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV19-0076]

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The study investigates the evolutionary history and species diversity of the leopard gecko using multi-locus sequence data and wide sampling. It reveals that leopard geckos in the pet trade come from a few shallow clades and the current estimate of species diversity is moderately underestimated.
The leopard gecko, Eublepharis macularius, is a widely used model organism in laboratory and experimental studies. The high phenotypic diversity in the pet trade, the fact that the provenance of different breeding lines is unknown, and that distinct Eublepharis species are known to hybridize, implies that the continued use of E. macularius as a model requires clarity on the origin of the lineages in the pet trade. We combine multi-locus sequence data and the first range-wide sampling of the genus Eublepharis to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the Eublepharidae and Eublepharis, with an updated time-tree for the Eublepharidae. Our sampling includes five of the six recognized species and additional nominal taxa of uncertain status comprising 43 samples from 34 localities plus 48 pet-trade samples. The Eublepharidae began diversifying in the Cretaceous. Eublepharis split from its sister genera in Africa in the Palaeocene-Eocene, and began diversifying in the Oligocene-Miocene, with late Miocene-Pliocene cladogenesis giving rise to extant species. The current species diversity within this group is moderately underestimated. Our species delimitation suggests 10 species with four potentially unnamed divergent lineages in Iran, India and Pakistan. All 30 individuals of E. macularius that we sampled from the pet trade, which include diverse morphotypes, come from a few shallow E. macularius clades, confirming that lab and pet trade strains are part of a single taxon. One of the wild-caught haplotypes of E. macularius, from near Karachi, Pakistan, is identical to (10) pet-trade samples and all other captive populations are closely related to wild caught animals from central/southern Pakistan (0.1-0.5 % minimum pairwise uncorrected ND2 sequence divergence).

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