4.7 Article

Opening the black box: phylogenetics and morphological evolution of the Malagasy fossorial lizards of the subfamily Scincinae

Journal

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 118-133

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2004.08.016

Keywords

Scincinae; molecular phylogeny; presacral vertebrae; partitioned Bayesian analyses; mixed-models; weighted squared-change parsimony; Madagascar; bayes factors

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The island of Madagascar harbors a highly endemic vertebrate fauna including a high diversity of lizards of the subfamily Scincinae, with about 57 species in eight genera. Since limb reduction seems to have been a common phenomenon during the evolution of Malagasy scincines, diagnosing evolutionary relationships based on morphology has been difficult. Phylogenetic analyses of multiple mitochondrial DNA sequences including the entire ND1, tRNA(LEU), tRNA(1LE), tRNA(GLN) genes, and fragments of the 12S and 16S rRNA and tRNA(MET) genes were conducted to test the monophyly of the largest genus Amphiglossus, and to evaluate the various formal and informal species groupings previously proposed for this species-rich group. A further objective was to determine the phylogenetic placements of the several greatly limb-reduced and limbless Malagasy scincines and ascertain whether any of these are derived from within the morphologically plesiomorphic Arnphiglossus. As limb reduction in skinks is mostly associated with body elongation via an increase in the number of presacral vertebrae, we evaluate the pattern of evolution of the numbers of presacral vertebrae in the context of our phylogeny. We demonstrate that Amphiglossus as currently diagnosed is non-monophyletic, and the species fall into two major groups. One of these groups is a clade that contains the included species of the subgenus Amphiglossus (Madascincus) among other species and is a member of a larger clade containing Paracontias and Pseudoacontias. In the second group, the nominate subgenus Amphiglossus (Amphiglossus) forms several subclades within a larger clade that also contains Androngo crenni and Pygomeles braconnieri, and is sister to VoeltZkowia. All analyses provide strong support for the monophyly of Paracontias and Voeltzkowia. Based on the preferred phylogenetic hypothesis and weighted squared-change parsimony we show that the ancestor of the Malagasy clade was already elongated and had a moderately high number of presacral vertebrae (46-48), which is hypothesized to be the ancestral condition for the whole Malagasy scincine clade. We further demonstrate that both multiple increases and reductions of presacral vertebrae evolved in many clades of Malagasy scincines and that the use of presacral vertebrae as a major character to diagnose supraspecific units is dubious. Based on our results and published morphological evidence we consider Scelotes waterloti Angel, 1930 to be a junior synonym of Amphiglossus reticulatus (Kaudern, 1922). (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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