Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5920311 Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The gecko genus Phyllopezus occurs across South America's open biomes: Cerrado, Seasonally Dry Tropical Forests (SDTF, including Caatinga), and Chaco. We generated a multi-gene dataset and estimated phylogenetic relationships among described Phyllopezus taxa and related species. We included exemplars from both described Phyllopezus pollicaris subspecies, P. p. pollicaris and P. p. przewalskii. Phylogenies from the concatenated data as well as species trees constructed from individual gene trees were largely congruent. All phylogeny reconstruction methods showed Bogertia lutzae as the sister species of Phyllopezus maranjonensis, rendering Phyllopezus paraphyletic. We synonymized the monotypic genus Bogertia with Phyllopezus to maintain a taxonomy that is isomorphic with phylogenetic history. We recovered multiple, deeply divergent, cryptic lineages within P. pollicaris. These cryptic lineages possessed mtDNA distances equivalent to distances among other gekkotan sister taxa. Described P. pollicaris subspecies are not reciprocally monophyletic and current subspecific taxonomy does not accurately reflect evolutionary relationships among cryptic lineages. We highlight the conservation significance of these results in light of the ongoing habitat loss in South America's open biomes.

Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights► We construct a multi-locus phylogeny for geckos in the genus Phyllopezus. ► Bogertia is related to Phyllopezus maranjonensis making Phyllopezus paraphyletic. ► The monotypic gecko genus Bogertia is synonymized with Phyllopezus. ► The gecko Phyllopezus pollicaris is composed of multiple cryptic lineages. ► Phyllopezus pollicaris subspecific taxonomy is not isomorphic with phylogeny.

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