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1.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38725637

RESUMEN

We present partial genome sequences of 50 salamander species (Urodela) from 10 genera and 4 families. These span nearly the entire range of genome sizes in salamanders, from ~14-130GB, the latter of which is among the largest of all animal genomes. Only three salamander genomes were available to this point, from Ambystomatidae (one species) and Salamandridae (two species from two genera), to which we have added Amphiumidae (one species), Plethodontidae (45 species from 6 genera), Proteidae (one species), and Sirenidae (three species from two genera). These span ~140 million years of evolutionary divergence, leaving only Cryptobranchidae, Hynobiidae, and Rhyacotritonidae as salamander families without genome assemblies. These data should facilitate additional future work on speciation and genome evolution, both within Urodela and across Animalia.

2.
Mol Ecol ; 33(2): e17219, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38015012

RESUMEN

Numerous mechanisms can drive speciation, including isolation by adaptation, distance, and environment. These forces can promote genetic and phenotypic differentiation of local populations, the formation of phylogeographic lineages, and ultimately, completed speciation. However, conceptually similar mechanisms may also result in stabilizing rather than diversifying selection, leading to lineage integration and the long-term persistence of population structure within genetically cohesive species. Processes that drive the formation and maintenance of geographic genetic diversity while facilitating high rates of migration and limiting phenotypic differentiation may thereby result in population genetic structure that is not accompanied by reproductive isolation. We suggest that this framework can be applied more broadly to address the classic dilemma of "structure" versus "species" when evaluating phylogeographic diversity, unifying population genetics, species delimitation, and the underlying study of speciation. We demonstrate one such instance in the Seepage Salamander (Desmognathus aeneus) from the southeastern United States. Recent studies estimated up to 6.3% mitochondrial divergence and four phylogenomic lineages with broad admixture across geographic hybrid zones, which could potentially represent distinct species supported by our species-delimitation analyses. However, while limited dispersal promotes substantial isolation by distance, microhabitat specificity appears to yield stabilizing selection on a single, uniform, ecologically mediated phenotype. As a result, climatic cycles promote recurrent contact between lineages and repeated instances of high migration through time. Subsequent hybridization is apparently not counteracted by adaptive differentiation limiting introgression, leaving a single unified species with deeply divergent phylogeographic lineages that nonetheless do not appear to represent incipient species.


Asunto(s)
ADN Mitocondrial , Urodelos , Animales , Urodelos/genética , ADN Mitocondrial/genética , Filogeografía , Filogenia , Fenotipo , Demografía , Especiación Genética
3.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 24(1): 221, 2023 May 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37259021

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: As genome sequencing becomes better integrated into scientific research, government policy, and personalized medicine, the primary challenge for researchers is shifting from generating raw data to analyzing these vast datasets. Although much work has been done to reduce compute times using various configurations of traditional CPU computing infrastructures, Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) offer opportunities to accelerate genomic workflows by orders of magnitude. Here we benchmark one GPU-accelerated software suite called NVIDIA Parabricks on Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), and an NVIDIA DGX cluster. We benchmarked six variant calling pipelines, including two germline callers (HaplotypeCaller and DeepVariant) and four somatic callers (Mutect2, Muse, LoFreq, SomaticSniper). RESULTS: We achieved up to 65 × acceleration with germline variant callers, bringing HaplotypeCaller runtimes down from 36 h to 33 min on AWS, 35 min on GCP, and 24 min on the NVIDIA DGX. Somatic callers exhibited more variation between the number of GPUs and computing platforms. On cloud platforms, GPU-accelerated germline callers resulted in cost savings compared with CPU runs, whereas some somatic callers were more expensive than CPU runs because their GPU acceleration was not sufficient to overcome the increased GPU cost. CONCLUSIONS: Germline variant callers scaled well with the number of GPUs across platforms, whereas somatic variant callers exhibited more variation in the number of GPUs with the fastest runtimes, suggesting that, at least with the version of Parabricks used here, these workflows are less GPU optimized and require benchmarking on the platform of choice before being deployed at production scales. Our study demonstrates that GPUs can be used to greatly accelerate genomic workflows, thus bringing closer to grasp urgent societal advances in the areas of biosurveillance and personalized medicine.


Asunto(s)
Gráficos por Computador , Programas Informáticos , Flujo de Trabajo , Genómica
4.
Syst Biol ; 72(1): 179-197, 2023 05 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36169600

RESUMEN

Significant advances have been made in species delimitation and numerous methods can test precisely defined models of speciation, though the synthesis of phylogeography and taxonomy is still sometimes incomplete. Emerging consensus treats distinct genealogical clusters in genome-scale data as strong initial evidence of speciation in most cases, a hypothesis that must therefore be falsified under an explicit evolutionary model. We can now test speciation hypotheses linking trait differentiation to specific mechanisms of divergence with increasingly large data sets. Integrative taxonomy can, therefore, reflect an understanding of how each axis of variation relates to underlying speciation processes, with nomenclature for distinct evolutionary lineages. We illustrate this approach here with Seal Salamanders (Desmognathus monticola) and introduce a new unsupervised machine-learning approach for species delimitation. Plethodontid salamanders are renowned for their morphological conservatism despite extensive phylogeographic divergence. We discover 2 geographic genetic clusters, for which demographic and spatial models of ecology and gene flow provide robust support for ecogeographic speciation despite limited phenotypic divergence. These data are integrated under evolutionary mechanisms (e.g., spatially localized gene flow with reduced migration) and reflected in emergent properties expected under models of reinforcement (e.g., ethological isolation and selection against hybrids). Their genetic divergence is prima facie evidence for species-level distinctiveness, supported by speciation models and divergence along axes such as behavior, geography, and climate that suggest an ecological basis with subsequent reinforcement through prezygotic isolation. As data sets grow more comprehensive, species-delimitation models can be tested, rejected, or corroborated as explicit speciation hypotheses, providing for reciprocal illumination of evolutionary processes and integrative taxonomies. [Desmognathus; integrative taxonomy; machine learning; species delimitation.].


Asunto(s)
Especiación Genética , Urodelos , Animales , Filogeografía , Filogenia , Urodelos/genética , Evolución Biológica
5.
Cancer Biomark ; 33(2): 173-184, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35213360

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Artificial intelligence (AI), including machine learning (ML) and deep learning, has the potential to revolutionize biomedical research. Defined as the ability to "mimic" human intelligence by machines executing trained algorithms, AI methods are deployed for biomarker discovery. OBJECTIVE: We detail the advancements and challenges in the use of AI for biomarker discovery in ovarian and pancreatic cancer. We also provide an overview of associated regulatory and ethical considerations. METHODS: We conducted a literature review using PubMed and Google Scholar to survey the published findings on the use of AI in ovarian cancer, pancreatic cancer, and cancer biomarkers. RESULTS: Most AI models associated with ovarian and pancreatic cancer have yet to be applied in clinical settings, and imaging data in many studies are not publicly available. Low disease prevalence and asymptomatic disease limits data availability required for AI models. The FDA has yet to qualify imaging biomarkers as effective diagnostic tools for these cancers. CONCLUSIONS: Challenges associated with data availability, quality, bias, as well as AI transparency and explainability, will likely persist. Explainable and trustworthy AI efforts will need to continue so that the research community can better understand and construct effective models for biomarker discovery in rare cancers.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Biomarcadores de Tumor , Neoplasias Ováricas/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias Pancreáticas/diagnóstico por imagen , Inteligencia Artificial/normas , Inteligencia Artificial/tendencias , Sesgo , Detección Precoz del Cáncer , Femenino , Humanos , Aprendizaje Automático , Pronóstico
6.
Ecol Evol ; 12(2): e8574, 2022 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35222955

RESUMEN

Dusky Salamanders (genus Desmognathus) currently comprise only 22 described, extant species. However, recent mitochondrial and nuclear estimates indicate the presence of up to 49 candidate species based on ecogeographic sampling. Previous studies also suggest a complex history of hybridization between these lineages. Studies in other groups suggest that disregarding admixture may affect both phylogenetic inference and clustering-based species delimitation. With a dataset comprising 233 Anchored Hybrid Enrichment (AHE) loci sequenced for 896 Desmognathus specimens from all 49 candidate species, we test three hypotheses regarding (i) species-level diversity, (ii) hybridization and admixture, and (iii) misleading phylogenetic inference. Using phylogenetic and population-clustering analyses considering gene flow, we find support for at least 47 candidate species in the phylogenomic dataset, some of which are newly characterized here while others represent combinations of previously named lineages that are collapsed in the current dataset. Within these, we observe significant phylogeographic structure, with up to 64 total geographic genetic lineages, many of which hybridize either narrowly at contact zones or extensively across ecological gradients. We find strong support for both recent admixture between terminal lineages and ancient hybridization across internal branches. This signal appears to distort concatenated phylogenetic inference, wherein more heavily admixed terminal specimens occupy apparently artifactual early-diverging topological positions, occasionally to the extent of forming false clades of intermediate hybrids. Additional geographic and genetic sampling and more robust computational approaches will be needed to clarify taxonomy, and to reconstruct a network topology to display evolutionary relationships in a manner that is consistent with their complex history of reticulation.

7.
Mol Ecol Resour ; 22(2): 487-502, 2022 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34329532

RESUMEN

Until recently many historical museum specimens were largely inaccessible to genomic inquiry, but high-throughput sequencing (HTS) approaches have allowed researchers to successfully sequence genomic DNA from dried and fluid-preserved museum specimens. In addition to preserved specimens, many museums contain large series of allozyme supernatant samples, but the amenability of these samples to HTS has not yet been assessed. Here, we compared the performance of a target-capture approach using alternative sources of genomic DNA from 10 specimens of spring salamanders (Plethodontidae: Gyrinophilus porphyriticus) collected between 1985 and 1990: allozyme supernatants, allozyme homogenate pellets and formalin-fixed tissues. We designed capture probes based on double-digest restriction-site associated sequencing (RADseq) derived loci from frozen blood samples available for seven of the specimens and assessed the success and consistency of capture and RADseq approaches. This study design enabled direct comparisons of data quality and potential biases among the different data sets for phylogenomic and population genomic analyses. We found that in phylogenetic analyses, all enrichment types for a given specimen clustered together. In principal component space all capture-based samples clustered together, but RADseq samples did not cluster with corresponding capture-based samples. Single nucleotide polymorphism calls were on average 18.3% different between enrichment types for a given individual, but these discrepancies were primarily due to differences in heterozygous/homozygous single nucleotide polymorphism calls. We demonstrate that both allozyme supernatant and formalin-fixed samples can be successfully used for population genomic analyses and we discuss ways to identify and reduce biases associated with combining capture and RADseq data.


Asunto(s)
Genética de Población , Metagenómica , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Urodelos/genética , Animales , Formaldehído , Biblioteca Genómica , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Isoenzimas , Museos , Filogenia , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN
8.
Mol Ecol ; 30(12): 2859-2871, 2021 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33969550

RESUMEN

A period of isolation in allopatry typically precedes local adaptation and subsequent divergence among lineages. Alternatively, locally adapted phenotypes may arise and persist in the face of gene flow, resulting in strong correlations between ecologically-relevant phenotypic variation and corresponding environmental gradients. Quantifying genetic, ecological, and phenotypic divergence in such lineages can provide insights into the abiotic and biotic mechanisms that structure populations and drive the accumulation of phenotypic and taxonomic diversity. Low-vagility organisms whose distributions span ephemeral geographic barriers present the ideal evolutionary context within which to address these questions. Here, we combine genetic (mtDNA and genome-wide SNPs) and phenotypic data to investigate the divergence history of caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona) endemic to the oceanic island of São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea archipelago. Consistent with a previous mtDNA study, we find two phenotypically and genetically distinct lineages that occur along a north-to-south axis with extensive admixture in the centre of the island. Demographic modelling supports divergence in allopatry (~300 kya) followed by secondary contact (~95 kya). Consequently, in contrast to a morphological study that interpreted latitudinal phenotypic variation in these caecilians as a cline within a single widespread species, our analyses suggest a history of allopatric lineage divergence and subsequent hybridization that may have blurred species boundaries. We propose that late Pleistocene volcanic activity favoured allopatric divergence between these lineages with local adaptation to climate maintaining a stable hybrid zone in the centre of São Tomé Island. Our study joins a growing number of systems demonstrating lineage divergence on volcanic islands with stark environmental transitions across small geographic distances.


Um período de isolamento em alopatria geralmente precede adaptação local e divergência subsequente entre linhagens evolutivas. Alternativamente, fenótipos adaptados localmente podem surgir e persistir apesar de fluxo gênico, resultando em fortes correlações entre variação fenotípica ecologicamente relevante e os gradientes ambientais correspondentes. Quantificar divergência genética, ecológica e fenotípica em tais linhagens pode ajudar a clarificar os mecanismos abióticos e bióticos que estruturam as populações e levam ao acúmulo de diversidade fenotípica e taxonômica. Organismos de baixa vagilidade, cujas áreas de distribuição incluem barreiras geográficas efêmeras, representam um contexto evolutivo ideal para abordar essas questões. Neste estudo, combinamos dados genéticos (mtDNA e SNPs genômicos) e fenotípicos para investigar a história de divergência de cecílias endêmicas da ilha oceânica de São Tomé, no arquipélago do Golfo da Guiné. Consistentemente com um estudo anterior de mtDNA, encontramos duas linhagens fenotipicamente e geneticamente distintas que ocorrem ao longo de um eixo norte-sul, com extensa mistura genética no centro da ilha. Modelagem demográfica suportou um cenário de divergência em alopatria (~ 300 mil anos atrás) seguida de contato secundário (~ 95 mil anos atrás). Ao contrário de um estudo morfológico que interpretou a variação fenotípica latitudinal nessas cecílias como uma clina dentro de uma única espécie amplamente difundida, nossas análises sugerem uma história de divergência de linhagens em alopatria e subsequente hibridização que pode ter confundido os limites das espécies. Propomos que atividade vulcânica durante o Pleistoceno tardio favoreceu divergência alopátrica entre essas linhagens, com adaptação local ao clima mantendo uma zona híbrida estável no centro da Ilha de São Tomé. Nosso estudo se une a um número crescente de sistemas que demonstram divergência entre linhagens em ilhas vulcânicas com transições ambientais marcantes ao longo de distâncias geográficas curtas.


Asunto(s)
Anfibios , Flujo Génico , Animales , Especiación Genética , Guinea , Islas , Filogenia
9.
Mol Ecol ; 29(16): 2994-3009, 2020 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32633832

RESUMEN

Catastrophic events, such as volcanic eruptions, can have profound impacts on the demographic histories of resident taxa. Due to its presumed effect on biodiversity, the Pleistocene eruption of super-volcano Toba has received abundant attention. We test the effects of the Toba eruption on the diversification, genetic diversity, and demography of three co-distributed species of parachuting frogs (Genus Rhacophorus) on Sumatra. We generate target-capture data (~950 loci and ~440,000 bp) for three species of parachuting frogs and use these data paired with previously generated double digest restriction-site associated DNA (ddRADseq) data to estimate population structure and genetic diversity, to test for population size changes using demographic modelling, and to estimate the temporal clustering of size change events using a full-likelihood Bayesian method. We find that populations around Toba exhibit reduced genetic diversity compared with southern populations, and that northern populations exhibit a shift in effective population size around the time of the eruption (~80 kya). However, we infer a stronger signal of expansion in southern populations around ~400 kya, and at least two of the northern populations may have also expanded at this time. Taken together, these findings suggest that the Toba eruption precipitated population declines in northern populations, but that the demographic history of these three species was also strongly impacted by mid-Pleistocene forest expansion during glacial periods. We propose local rather than regional effects of the Toba eruption, and emphasize the dynamic nature of diversification on the Sunda Shelf.


Asunto(s)
Anuros , Aviación , Animales , Anuros/genética , Teorema de Bayes , ADN Mitocondrial/genética , Bosques , Variación Genética , Indonesia , Filogenia
10.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 146: 106751, 2020 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32028035

RESUMEN

Gene flow between evolutionarily distinct lineages is increasingly recognized as a common occurrence. Such processes distort our ability to diagnose and delimit species, as well as confound attempts to estimate phylogenetic relationships. A conspicuous example is Dusky Salamanders (Desmognathus), a common model-system for ecology, evolution, and behavior. Only 22 species are described, 7 in the last 40 years. However, mitochondrial datasets indicate the presence of up to 45 "candidate species" and multiple paraphyletic taxa presenting a complex history of reticulation. Some authors have even suggested that the search for species boundaries in the group may be in vain. Here, we analyze nuclear and mitochondrial data containing 161 individuals from at least 49 distinct evolutionary lineages that we treat as candidate species. Concatenated and species-tree methods do not estimate fully resolved relationships among these taxa. Comparing topologies and applying methods for estimating phylogenetic networks, we find strong support for numerous instances of hybridization throughout the history of the group. We suggest that these processes may be more common than previously thought across the phylogeography-phylogenetics continuum, and that while the search for species boundaries in Desmognathus may not be in vain, it will be complicated by factors such as crypsis, parallelism, and gene-flow.


Asunto(s)
Mitocondrias/genética , Urodelos/clasificación , Animales , Teorema de Bayes , Núcleo Celular/genética , Genes Mitocondriales , Filogenia , Filogeografía , Urodelos/genética
11.
Ecol Evol ; 9(6): 3620-3636, 2019 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30962914

RESUMEN

Effective conservation and management of pond-breeding amphibians depends on the accurate estimation of population structure, demographic parameters, and the influence of landscape features on breeding-site connectivity. Population-level studies of pond-breeding amphibians typically sample larval life stages because they are easily captured and can be sampled nondestructively. These studies often identify high levels of relatedness between individuals from the same pond, which can be exacerbated by sampling the larval stage. Yet, the effect of these related individuals on population genetic studies using genomic data is not yet fully understood. Here, we assess the effect of within-pond relatedness on population and landscape genetic analyses by focusing on the barred tiger salamanders (Ambystoma mavortium) from the Nebraska Sandhills. Utilizing genome-wide SNPs generated using a double-digest RADseq approach, we conducted standard population and landscape genetic analyses using datasets with and without siblings. We found that reduced sample sizes influenced parameter estimates more than the inclusion of siblings, but that within-pond relatedness led to the inference of spurious population structure when analyses depended on allele frequencies. Our landscape genetic analyses also supported different models across datasets depending on the spatial resolution analyzed. We recommend that future studies not only test for relatedness among larval samples but also remove siblings before conducting population or landscape genetic analyses. We also recommend alternative sampling strategies to reduce sampling siblings before sequencing takes place. Biases introduced by unknowingly including siblings can have significant implications for population and landscape genetic analyses, and in turn, for species conservation strategies and outcomes.

12.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 134: 1-11, 2019 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30703515

RESUMEN

Complex geological processes often drive biotic diversification on islands. The islands of Sumatra and Java have experienced dramatic historical changes, including isolation by marine incursions followed by periodic connectivity with the rest of Sundaland across highland connections. To determine how this geological history influenced island invasions, we investigated the colonization history and diversification of bent-toed geckos (genus Cyrtodactylus) on Sumatra and west Java. We used mitochondrial and nuclear sequence data to explore species boundaries, estimate phylogenetic relationships and divergence times, and to reconstruct ancestral range evolution. We found that Sumatran and Javan Cyrtodactylus were closely related to species from the Thai-Malay Peninsula, rather than from Borneo, and that Cyrtodactylus most likely dispersed to Sumatra three times during the late Oligocene and early Miocene. Similarly, Cyrtodactylus invaded west Java from Sumatra once in the early Miocene. Our results suggest that despite isolation by marine incursions during much of the Miocene, Cyrtodactylus dispersed to and from Sumatra and west Java likely via land bridges, and that in situ diversification occurred several times on Sumatra.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Lagartos/clasificación , Animales , Teorema de Bayes , Calibración , Fósiles , Geografía , Indonesia , Islas , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Filogenia , Especificidad de la Especie
13.
Data Brief ; 18: 1995-1999, 2018 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29904706

RESUMEN

In this data article we present species trees based on coalescent species delimitation results for North American whipsnakes, as well as metadata pertaining to the article "The effect of missing data on coalescent species delimitation and a taxonomic revision of whipsnakes (Colubridae: Masticophis)" (MPE-2017-76-R1). Species trees were constructed using SNP data generated from double-digest RADseq, filtered to 80% completeness between species. Tables correspond with the primary manuscript and serve as a repository of genetic sequence information for whipsnakes. These data can be downloaded and combined with future whipsnake datasets.

14.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 123: 101-112, 2018 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29496542

RESUMEN

Geological and climatological processes can drive the synchronous diversification of co-distributed species. The islands of Sumatra and Java have experienced complex geological and climatological histories, including extensive sea-level changes and the formation of valleys between northern, central, and southern components of the Barisan Mountain Range, which may have promoted diversification of their resident species. We investigate diversification on these islands using 13 species of the parachuting frog genus Rhacophorus. We use both mitochondrial and nuclear sequence data, along with genome-wide SNPs to estimate phylogenetic structure and divergence times, and to test for synchronous diversification. We find support for synchronous divergence among sister-species pairs from Sumatra and Java ∼9 Ma, as well as of populations of four co-distributed taxa on Sumatra ∼5.6 Ma. We found that sister species diverged in allopatry on Sumatra and conclude that divergence on Sumatra and Java was affected by sea-level fluctuations that promoted isolation in allopatry.


Asunto(s)
Anuros/clasificación , Islas , Filogenia , Animales , Anuros/genética , Teorema de Bayes , Biodiversidad , Análisis por Conglomerados , ADN Mitocondrial/genética , Flujo Génico , Variación Genética , Indonesia , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Filogeografía , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple/genética , Especificidad de la Especie
15.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 127: 356-366, 2018 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29567505

RESUMEN

A stable alpha taxonomy is essential to understanding evolutionary processes and achieving effective conservation aims. Taxonomy depends on the identification of independently evolving lineages, and the delimitation of these lineages based on multiple lines of evidence. Coalescent species delimitation within an integrative framework has increased the rigor of the delimitation process. Here we use genome-wide SNP data and coalescent species delimitation to explore lineage relationships within several North American whipsnake species, test the species status of several lineages, and test the effect of missing data on species delimitation. We find support for the elevation of several previously recognized subspecies to full species status, and formally elevate two species. This study demonstrates the power of molecular data and model-based delimitation methods to identify evolutionary relationships, and finds that missing data have little impact on the outcome of delimitation analyses.


Asunto(s)
Colubridae/clasificación , Filogenia , Animales , Teorema de Bayes , Biodiversidad , Núcleo Celular/genética , Citocromos c/genética , Geografía , Mitocondrias/genética , Especificidad de la Especie
16.
Mol Ecol ; 26(20): 5729-5751, 2017 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28802078

RESUMEN

Allopatric divergence following the formation of geographical features has been implicated as a major driver of evolutionary diversification. Widespread species complexes provide opportunities to examine allopatric divergence across varying degrees of isolation in both time and space. In North America, several geographical features may play such a role in diversification, including the Mississippi River, Pecos River, Rocky Mountains, Cochise Filter Barrier, Gulf of California and Isthmus of Tehuantepec. We used thousands of nuclear single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and mitochondrial DNA from several species of whipsnakes (genera Masticophis and Coluber) distributed across North and Central America to investigate the role that these geographical features have played on lineage divergence. We hypothesize that these features restrict gene flow and separate whipsnakes into diagnosable genomic clusters. We performed genomic clustering and phylogenetic reconstructions at the species and population levels using Bayesian and likelihood analyses and quantified migration levels across geographical features to assess the degree of genetic isolation due to allopatry. Our analyses suggest that (i) major genetic divisions are often consistent with isolation by geographical features, (ii) migration rates between clusters are asymmetrical across major geographical features, and (iii) areas that receive proportionally more migrants possess higher levels of genetic diversity. Collectively, our findings suggest that multiple features of the North American landscape contributed to allopatric divergence in this widely distributed snake group.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Colubridae/clasificación , Genética de Población , Animales , América Central , ADN Mitocondrial/genética , Flujo Génico , Geografía , América del Norte , Filogenia , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple
17.
Zootaxa ; 4107(4): 517-40, 2016 May 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27394838

RESUMEN

We redescribe Cyrtodactylus lateralis (Werner) on the basis of new specimens. Cyrtodactylus lateralis is a prehensile-tailed species, known from scattered lowland to mid-elevation localities in northern Sumatra. The prehensile-tailed Cyrtodactylus are more speciose and have a wider distribution than previously thought. This group includes a mainland SE Asian clade consisting of C. elok, C. interdigitalis, and C. brevipalmatus and an insular clade containing C. durio, C. lateralis, C. nuaulu, C. serratus, C. spinosus, and C. stresemanni. However, a distinctive color pattern in the Wallacean and Papuan species and uncertainty surrounding the type locality of C. stresemanni raise unresolved questions about the inclusiveness of the insular clade. DNA sequence data supports a close relationship between C. elok and C. interdigitalis, but also reveals that C. lateralis and C. durio are not closely related to these species.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos/anatomía & histología , Lagartos/clasificación , Filogenia , Distribución Animal , Animales , Femenino , Indonesia , Lagartos/genética , Lagartos/fisiología , Masculino , Especificidad de la Especie
18.
Zootaxa ; 4020(3): 495-516, 2015 Sep 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26624112

RESUMEN

We describe Cyrtodactylus psarops sp. nov. and C. semicinctus sp. nov., two new species of bent-toed geckos from montane forests in the southern Bukit Barisan Range of Sumatra, Indonesia. The new species are closely related to one another and to C. semenanjungensis, a lowland species currently known only from Peninsular Malaysia. Three characters of the new species immediately distinguish them from most congeners in the Sunda Region: they lack transversely enlarged subcaudals, have a precloacal depression, and have a greatly enlarged scale positioned at the apex of a continuous series of femoral and precloacal pore-bearing scales. They differ from one another in cephalic pattern, tuberculation of the brachium, and in numbers of cloacal tubercles, dorsal bands, and ventrals in a transverse row. The greatly enlarged scale at the apex of the precloacal pores appears to be a rare apomorphy of these two species and C. agamensis.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos/anatomía & histología , Lagartos/clasificación , Animales , Femenino , Indonesia , Masculino , Filogenia
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