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Molecular phylogenetics of sub-Saharan African natricine snakes, and the biogeographic origins of the Seychelles endemic Lycognathophis seychellensis.

Authors :
Deepak, V.
Maddock, Simon T.
Williams, Rhiannon
Nagy, Zoltán T.
Conradie, Werner
Rocha, Sara
James Harris, D.
Perera, Ana
Gvoždík, Václav
Doherty-Bone, Thomas M.
Kamei, Rachunliu G.
Menegon, Michele
Labisko, Jim
Morel, Charles
Cooper, Natalie
Day, Julia J.
Gower, David J.
Source :
Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution. Aug2021, Vol. 161, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

[Display omitted] • First DNA study of all sub-Saharan African & Seychelles natricine snake genera (70% of species). • Sub-Saharan African and Seychelles natricines are monophyletic. • Lycognathophis seychellensis likely sister to (Afronatrix (Helophis , Hydraethiops)). • L. seychellensis is not a Gondwanan relic, but dispersed to the Seychelles from Africa. • Low genetic variation in L. seychellensis across five Seychelles islands. Phylogenetic relationships of sub-Saharan African natricine snakes are understudied and poorly understood, which in turn has precluded analyses of the historical biogeography of the Seychelles endemic Lycognathophis seychellensis. We inferred the phylogenetic relationships of Seychelles and mainland sub-Saharan natricines by analysing a multilocus DNA sequence dataset for three mitochondrial (mt) and four nuclear (nu) genes. The mainland sub-Saharan natricines and L. seychellensis comprise a well-supported clade. Two maximally supported sets of relationships within this clade are (Limnophis,Natriciteres) and (Afronatrix ,(Hydraethiops,Helophis)). The relationships of L. seychellensis with respect to these two lineages are not clearly resolved by analysing concatenated mt and nu data. Analysed separately, nu data best support a sister relationship of L. seychellensis with (Afronatrix ,(Hydraethiops,Helophis)) and mt data best support a sister relationship with all mainland sub-Saharan natricines. Methods designed to cope with incomplete lineage sorting strongly favour the former hypothesis. Genetic variation among up to 33 L. seychellensis from five Seychelles islands is low. Fossil calibrated divergence time estimates support an overseas dispersal of the L. seychellensis lineage to the Seychelles from mainland Africa ca. 43–25 million years before present (Ma), rather than this taxon being a Gondwanan relic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10557903
Volume :
161
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150816876
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107152