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A sisters’ story: comparative phylogeography and taxonomy of H ierophis viridiflavus and H . gemonensis ( S erpentes, C olubridae)
Author(s) -
Mezzasalma Marcello,
Dall'Asta Andrea,
Loy Anna,
Cheylan Marc,
Lymberakis Petros,
Zuffi Marco A. L.,
Tomović Ljiljana,
Odierna Gaetano,
Guarino Fabio M.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
zoologica scripta
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.204
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1463-6409
pISSN - 0300-3256
DOI - 10.1111/zsc.12115
Subject(s) - biology , phylogeography , monophyly , clade , phylogenetic tree , taxonomy (biology) , sensu , zoology , evolutionary biology , genetics , gene , genus
We used a multidisciplinary approach to infer the taxonomy and historical biogeography of H ierophis viridiflavus and H . gemonensis , performing molecular analyses of mitochondrial (16 S , C yt‐b, ND 4) and nuclear markers ( PRLR ), a landmark‐based morphometric study and a cytogenetic analysis. Our data distinguished three main groups in the studied species, corresponding to H . gemonensis and to two monophyletic clades ( E and W ) within H . viridiflavus . Clades E and W display a significant genetic (about 4% for C yt‐b and ND 4) and morphological divergence and a different morphology of the W sex chromosome (submetacentric in clade E and telocentric in clade W ). Taking into account the existing divergence, these clades appear to represent independent phylogenetic units, deserving elevation to species status. Specific names should be H . viridiflavus (Lacépède, 1789) and H . carbonarius (Bonaparte 1833) for clades W and E , respectively. The phylogeography of the studied species is only partially concordant with a general pattern of ‘southern richness and northern purity’ of genetic diversity, whereas H . gemonensis exhibits high genetic diversity at low latitudes (especially in the Peloponnese), H . carbonarius shows a number of different haplotypes both at low (along the southern I talian A pennines and in S icily) and high latitudes in Italy. Furthermore, a relaxed clock model hypothesizes the differentiation between H . gemonensis and H . viridiflavus sensu lato at about 7 Mya, in the M essinian. Subsequently, the speciation involving H . viridiflavus sensu stricto and H . carbonarius took place in the Quaternary, probably as a result of Pleistocene climatic oscillations. Furthermore, our results are consistent with the existence of several ‘refugia within refugia’ in Italy and in the Balkans and depict the major cladogenesis as allopatric events, mainly driven by paleoclimatic and geographical factors.