Unravelling interspecific relationships among highland lizards : first phylogenetic hypothesis using total evidence of the Liolaemus montanus group (Iguania: Liolaemidae)
Fecha
2020-05Autor
Abdala, Cristian Simón
Quinteros, Andrés Sebastián
Semhan, Romina Valeria
Bulacios Arroyo, Ana Lucia
Schulte, James
Paz, Marcos Maximiliano
Ruiz Monachesi, Mario Ricardo
Laspiur, Alejandro
Aguilar Kirigin, Álvaro Juan
Gutiérrez Poblete, Roberto
Valladares Faundez, Pablo
Valdés, José Julián
Portelli, Sabrina
Santa Cruz, Roy
Aparicio, James
García, Noelia
Langstroth, Robert
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
The South American lizard genus Liolaemus comprises > 260 species, of which > 60 are recognized as members
of the Liolaemus montanus group, distributed throughout the Andes in central Peru, Bolivia, Chile and central
Argentina. Despite its great morphological diversity and complex taxonomic history, a robust phylogenetic estimate
is still lacking for this group. Here, we study the morphological and molecular diversity of the L. montanus group
and present the most complete quantitative phylogenetic hypothesis for the group to date. Our phylogeny includes
103 terminal taxa, of which 91 are members of the L. montanus group (58 are assigned to available species and
33 are of uncertain taxonomic status). Our matrix includes 306 morphological and ecological characters and 3057
molecular characters. Morphological characters include 48 continuous and 258 discrete characters, of which 70%
(216) are new to the literature. The molecular characters represent five mitochondrial markers. We performed
three analyses: a morphology-only matrix, a molecular-only matrix and a matrix including both morphological and
molecular characters (total evidence hypothesis). Our total evidence hypothesis recovered the L. montanus group as
monophyletic and included ≥ 12 major clades, revealing an unexpectedly complex phylogeny.
Colecciones
- Artículos de revista [767]










