Comparative phylogeography of West African amphibians and reptiles

Comparative phylogeographic studies often support shared divergence times for co-distributed species with similar life histories and habitat specializations. During the late Holocene, West Africa experienced aridification and the turnover of rain forest habitats into savannas. These fragmented rain...

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Veröffentlicht in:Evolution 2020-04, Vol.74 (4), p.716-724
Hauptverfasser: Leaché, Adam D, Oaks, Jamie R., Ofori-Boateng, Caleb, Fujita, Matthew K.
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creator Leaché, Adam D
Oaks, Jamie R.
Ofori-Boateng, Caleb
Fujita, Matthew K.
description Comparative phylogeographic studies often support shared divergence times for co-distributed species with similar life histories and habitat specializations. During the late Holocene, West Africa experienced aridification and the turnover of rain forest habitats into savannas. These fragmented rain forests harbor impressive numbers of endemic and threatened species. In this setting, populations of co-distributed rain forest species are expected to have diverged simultaneously, whereas divergence events for species adapted to savanna and forest-edge habitats should be absent or idiosyncratic. We conducted a Bayesian analysis of shared evolutionary events to test models of population divergence for 20 species of anurans (frogs) and squamates (lizards and snakes) that are distributed across the Dahomey Gap, a climate change-induced savanna barrier responsible for fragmenting previously contiguous rain forests of Ghana into two regions: the Togo-Volta Hills and the Southwestern Forests. A model of asynchronous diversification is supported for anurans and squamates, suggesting that drivers of diversification are not specifically related to ecological and life history associations with habitat types. Instead, the wide variability of genetic divergence histories exhibited by these species suggests that biodiversity in this region has been shaped by diversification events that extend beyond the Holocene. Comparisons of the genealogical divergence index, a measure of the genetic divergence between populations due to the combined effects of genetic isolation and gene flow, illustrate that these populations represent a broad sampling of the speciation continuum.
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During the late Holocene, West Africa experienced aridification and the turnover of rain forest habitats into savannas. These fragmented rain forests harbor impressive numbers of endemic and threatened species. In this setting, populations of co-distributed rain forest species are expected to have diverged simultaneously, whereas divergence events for species adapted to savanna and forest-edge habitats should be absent or idiosyncratic. We conducted a Bayesian analysis of shared evolutionary events to test models of population divergence for 20 species of anurans (frogs) and squamates (lizards and snakes) that are distributed across the Dahomey Gap, a climate change-induced savanna barrier responsible for fragmenting previously contiguous rain forests of Ghana into two regions: the Togo-Volta Hills and the Southwestern Forests. 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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Amphibians
Amphibians - genetics
Amphibians - physiology
Animal Distribution
Animals
Bayes Theorem
Bayesian analysis
Biodiversity
Biological Evolution
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Climate change
Comparative phylogeography
Dahomey Gap
Divergence
diversification
Endangered & extinct species
Endemic species
Forests
Frogs
Gene flow
genealogical divergence index
Genetic isolation
Genetic Variation
Ghana
Habitat fragmentation
Habitats
Holocene
Life history
Lizards
Mathematical models
Phylogeography
Population genetics
Populations
Rain
Rainforests
Reptiles
Reptiles & amphibians
Reptiles - genetics
Reptiles - physiology
Savannahs
Snakes
Speciation
Threatened species
West Africa
title Comparative phylogeography of West African amphibians and reptiles
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