
Species delimitation and digit number in a N orth A frican skink
Author(s) -
Brown R. P.,
Tejangkura T.,
El Mouden E. H.,
Ait Baamrane M. A.,
Znari M.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.326
Subject(s) - biology , disjunct , coalescent theory , evolutionary biology , range (aeronautics) , phylogenetic tree , population , gene flow , ecology , zoology , genetic variation , genetics , gene , demography , materials science , sociology , composite material
Delimitation of species is an important and controversial area within evolutionary biology. Many species boundaries have been defined using morphological data. New genetic approaches now offer more objective evaluation and assessment of the reliability of morphological variation as an indicator that speciation has occurred. We examined geographic variation in morphology of the continuously distributed skink C halcides mionecton from M orocco and used B ayesian analyses of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA (mt DNA ) loci to examine: (i) their concordance with morphological patterns, (ii) support for species delimitation, (iii) timing of speciation, and (iv) levels of gene flow between species. Four digit individuals were found at sites between C ap R hir (in the south) and the northern extreme of the range, whereas five‐digit individuals were found in two disjunct areas: (i) south of C ap R hir and (ii) the north of the range where they were often syntopic with four‐digit individuals. The pattern of variation in generalized body dimensions was largely concordant with that in digit number, suggesting two general morphotypes. B ayesian analyses of population structure showed that individuals from sites south of C ap R hir formed one genetic cluster, but that northern four‐ and five‐digit individuals clustered together. Statistical support for delimitation of these genetic clusters into two species was provided by a recent B ayesian method. Phylogenetic–coalescent dating with external time calibrations indicates that speciation was relatively recent, with a 95% posterior interval of 0.46–2.66 mya. This postdates equivalent phylogenetic dating estimates of sequence divergence by approximately 1 Ma. Statistical analyses of a small number of independent loci provide important insights into the history of the speciation process in C. mionecton and support delimitation of populations into two species with distributions that are spatially discordant with patterns of morphological variation.