6 results on '"Vieites, D. R."'
Search Results
2. Discovery of the first Asian plethodontid salamander
- Author
-
Min, M. S., Yang, S. Y., Bonett, R. M., Vieites, D. R., Brandon, R. A., and Wake, D. B.
- Subjects
Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Author(s): M. S. Min [1]; S. Y. Yang [2]; R. M. Bonett [3]; D. R. Vieites [3]; R. A. Brandon [4]; D. B. Wake (corresponding author) [3] Nearly 70% of [...]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Productivity as the main factor correlating with migratory behaviour in the evolutionary history of warblers.
- Author
-
Ponti, R., Arcones, A., Ferrer, X., and Vieites, D. R.
- Subjects
WARBLERS ,BIRD migration ,BIRD evolution ,BIRD phylogeny ,PRIMARY productivity (Biology) - Abstract
The evolution of migration in birds and its causes are still subject of debate. Recent studies tracking current bird migration have identified peaks in net primary productivity (NPP) as a main driver of bird migratory behaviour. However, it is unclear which variables may have played a major role in the evolution of bird migration at deeper phylogenetic levels. Here, we used phylogenetic comparative methods to assess whether the evolutionary patterns of migratory distances, as a proxy for migratory behaviour, are correlated with several biometric, climatic and productivity variables in a phylogenetic context, using Sylvia warblers as a case study. Our results recover NPP in the breeding range and during the breeding season as the variable with stronger positive correlation with migratory distances, being always included in the best models considering all potential variables. Several climatic variables show a correlation with the evolution of migration, but those are also tightly correlated with NPP. Among morphological variables, migratory lineages tend to have longer wings than sedentary ones. Although NPP has been identified as a driver of migratory behaviour in current species, in a phylogenetic scale it is not possible to disentangle if it was a main driver in the evolution of bird migratory behaviour or a consequence of it, yet migration and NPP seem to be tightly related today and along the long evolutionary history of these passerines. The evolution of migration in birds and its causes are still subject to debate. It is unclear which variables may have played a major role in the evolution of bird migration at deeper phylogenetic levels. Here, we used phylogenetic comparative methods to assess whether the evolutionary patterns of migratory distances, as a proxy for migratory behaviour, are correlated with several biometric, climatic and productivity variables in a phylogenetic context, using Sylvia warblers as a case study. Our results recover Net Primary Productivity (NPP) in the breeding range and during the breeding season as the variable with stronger positive correlation with migratory distances. Migration and NPP seem to be tightly related today and along the long evolutionary history of these passerines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Discovery of the first Asian plethodontid salamander.
- Author
-
Conservation Genome Resource Bank for Korean Wildlife, and Brain Korea 21, School of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Seoul 151-742, South Korea., Department of Biology, Inha University, Incheon 402-751, South Korea., Museum of Vertebrate Zoology and Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA., Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois 62901, USA., Min, M. S., Yang, S. Y., Bonett, R. M., Vieites, D. R., Brandon, R. A., and Wake, D. B.
- Subjects
SALAMANDERS ,AMPHIBIANS ,EXTREMITIES (Anatomy) ,AMPHIUMIDAE ,AMBYSTOMATIDAE ,CRYPTOBRANCHIDAE - Abstract
Nearly 70% of the 535 species of salamanders in the world are members of a single family, the Plethodontidae, or lungless salamanders. The centre of diversity for this clade is North and Middle America, where the vast majority (99%) of species are found. We report the discovery of the first Asian plethodontid salamander, from montane woodlands in southwestern Korea. The new species superficially resembles members of North American genera, in particular the morphologically conservative genus Plethodon. However, phylogenetic analysis of the nuclear encoded gene Rag-1 shows the new taxon to be widely divergent from Plethodon. The new salamander differs osteologically from putative relatives, especially with respect to the tongue (attached protrusible) and the derived tarsus. We place the species in a new genus on the basis of the morphological and molecular data. The distribution of the new salamander adds to the enigma of Old World plethodontids, which are otherwise restricted to the western Mediterranean region, suggesting a more extensive past distribution of the family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. New evidence for parallel evolution of colour patterns in Malagasy poison frogs (Mantella).
- Author
-
Chiari, Y., Vences, M., Vieites, D. R., Rabemananjara, F., Bora, P., Ravoahangimalala, O. Ramilijaona, and Meyer, A.
- Subjects
GOLDEN frogs ,MANTELLIDAE ,AMPHIBIANS ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,HEREDITY ,CLADISTIC analysis ,GENETICS - Abstract
Malagasy poison frogs of the genusMantellaare diurnal and toxic amphibians of highly variable and largely aposematic coloration. Previous studies provided evidence for several instances of homoplastic colour evolution in this genus but were unable to sufficiently resolve relationships among major species groups or to clarify the phylogenetic position of several crucial taxa. Here, we provide cytochromebdata for 143 individuals of three species in theMantella madagascariensisgroup, including four newly discovered populations. Three of these new populations are characterized by highly variable coloration and patterns but showed no conspicuous increase of haplotype diversity which would be expected under a scenario of secondary hybridization or admixture of chromatically uniform populations. Several populations of these variable forms and ofM. croceawere geographically interspersed between the distribution areas ofMantella aurantiacaandMantella milotympanum. This provides further support for the hypothesis that the largely similar uniformly orange colour of the last two species evolved in parallel. Phylogenies based on over 2000 bp of two nuclear genes (Rag-1andRag-2) identified reliably a clade of theMantella betsileoandMantella laevigatagroups as sister lineage to theM. madagascariensisgroup, but did not support species within the latter group as monophyletic. The evolutionary history of these frogs might have been characterized by fast and recurrent evolution of colour patterns, possibly triggered by strong selection pressures and mimicry effects, being too complex to be represented by simple bifurcating models of phylogenetic reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Genotyping-by-Sequencing (GBS) of large amphibian genomes: A comparative study of two non-model species endemic to Italy
- Author
-
Nadav Pezaro, Daniele Macale, Valentina Rovelli, Leonardo Vignoli, David R. Vieites, Aritz Ruiz-González, Vincenzo Buono, Ettore Randi, Francesca Davoli, Rovelli, V., Ruiz-Gonzalez, A., Vignoli, L., Macale, D., Buono, V., Davoli, F., Vieites, D. R., Pezaro, N., and Randi, E.
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Whole genome duplications ,Population ,Rana italica ,Population genetics ,Conservation genomic ,Next Generation Sequencing ,SNP ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,DNA sequencing ,newt ,whole genome duplications ,education ,Genotyping ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Platycephalus ,biology.organism_classification ,frog ,010601 ecology ,Evolutionary biology ,Conservation genomics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Euproctus platycephalus ,Frog ,SNPs - Abstract
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) and related technologies have revolutionized the field of conservation and population genetics, providing novel tools and the capacity to discover thousands of new Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) for the analysis of population parameters. However, gathering NGS data for organisms with very large genomes, such as amphibians, remains challenging because it is still unclear how the current methods perform. Here, we use the Genotyping-by-Sequencing (GBS) approach to generate SNP data for the genotyping of two amphibian species that are of conservation concern, the Sardinian brook salamander (Euproctus platycephalus) and the Italian stream frog (Rana italica). Both E. platycephalus and R. italica have very large genomes (5.53 Gb and >20 Gb, respectively) so genomic data are not available for either of them. We used 95 individual samples and one Illumina lane for each species, with an additional lane for E. platycephalus. After filtering, we obtained 961 and 854 high-coverage SNPs for E. platycephalus and R. italica, respectively. Our results suggest that GBS can serve as a reliable and cost-effective method for genotyping large amphibian genomes, including non-model species.
- Published
- 2019
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.