6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c0f5b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Multilocus and morphological analysis of south‐eastern Iberian Wall lizards (Squamata,Podarcis)

Javier LluchMarta BassittaAna Pérez-cembranosC. RamonBàrbara TerrasaPilar González NavarroJoana M. BuadesJosé A. CastroRichard P. C. BrownValentín Pérez-melladoAntònia PicornellJesús Ortega

subject

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMitochondrial DNASquamataPhylogenetic treebiologyLineage (evolution)Podarcisbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyPodarcis vaucheriEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyCladeMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

The phylogenetic relationships among the wall lizards of the Podarcis hispanicus complex that inhabit the south-east (SE) of the Iberian Peninsula and other lineages of the complex remain unclear. In this study, four mitochondrial and two nuclear markers were used to study genetic relationships within this complex. The phylogenetic analyses based on mtDNA gene trees constructed with ML and BI, and a species tree using *BEAST support three divergent clades in this region: the Valencia, Galera and Albacete/Murcia lineages. These three lineages were also corroborated in species delimitation analyses based on mtDNA using bPTP, mPTP, GMYC, ABGD and BAPS. Bayesian inference species delimitation method (BPP) based on both nuclear data and a combined data set (mtDNA + nuclear) showed high posterior probabilities for these three SE lineages (≥0.94) and another Bayesian analysis (STACEY) based on combined data set recovered the same three groups in this region. Divergence time dating of the species tree provided an estimated divergence of the Galera lineage from the other SE group (Podarcis vaucheri, (Albacete/Murcia, Valencia)) at 12.48 Ma. During this period, the Betic–Rifian arc was isolated, which could have caused the isolation of the Galera form distributed to the south of the Betic Corridor. Although lizards from the Albacete/Murcia and Galera lineage are morphologically similar, they clearly represent distinct genetic lineages. The noteworthy separation of the Galera lineage enables us to conclude that this lineage must be considered as a new full species. (Less)

https://doi.org/10.1111/zsc.12450