Daniel L. Rabosky's research while affiliated with University of Michigan and other places

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Publications (174)


Morphological and genetic data challenge species and subspecies in the Lerista microtis group (Squamata: Scincidae)
  • Article
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April 2024

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169 Reads

Zootaxa

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The subspecies rank has been widely applied by taxonomists to capture infraspecific variation within the Linnaean classification system. Many subspecies described throughout the 20 th century were recognised largely based on perceived variation in single morphological characters yet have since been found not to correspond to separately evolving population lineages, thus requiring synonymy or elevation to full species under lineage-based views of species. These modern lineage-based taxonomic resolutions have resulted from a combination of new molecular genetic techniques, improved geographical sampling of specimens, and more sophisticated analyses of morphological variation (e.g., statistical assessments rather than solely univariate descriptive ones). Here, we revisit the current taxonomic arrangement of species-level and subspecific taxa in the Lerista microtis (Gray) group, which is distributed along a narrow ~2000 km strip on the southern coast of Australia. From specimens of the L. microtis group, an additional species (Lerista arenicola) and two additional subspecies (L. m. intermedia and L. m. schwaneri) were described. We collected data on mensural, meristic, and colour pattern characters to explore morpho-spatial relationships among these taxa. Although our morphological analyses revealed some distinctiveness among specimens from locations assigned to each taxon, this variation is continuous along Australia's southern coastline, assuming the form of a geographic cline rather than discrete forms. For many characters, however, spatial patterns were inconsistent with the original descriptions, particularly of the subspecies. Moreover, analysis of genome wide restriction-associated DNA loci revealed multiple instances of paraphyly among taxa, with phylogenetic clustering of specimens assigned to distinct species and subspecies. These emerging patterns provide no support for L. arenicola as a species evolving separately from L. microtis. Additionally, our findings challenge the presumed distinctiveness and coherence of the three subspecies of L. microtis. We thus synonymise L. arenicola and the L. microtis subspecies with L. microtis and provide a redescription of a single yet morphologically variable species-an arrangement that best reflects evolutionary history and the continuous nature of morphological variation across space.

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Figure 1. Diversity of extractable data and analyses resulting from traditional computed tomography (CT), diffusible iodine-based contrast-enhanced CT (diceCT), and photogrammetry (https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M535781) of a formalin-fixed, ethanol-stored lizard specimen. Traditional CT scanning (https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M359089) generates tomograms (left center) that can be used to reconstruct and isolate (a) the bony skeleton with osteoderms (teal), (b) isolated cranium segmented into individual and labeled bones, including (c) the braincase and (d) endocranial space representing the inner ear (with associated stapes), as well as (e) conducting Finite Element Analyses such as evaluating the distribution of stresses in the lower jaw when forces are applied (the red arrows) or (f) wall thickness analyses such as of cranial osteoderms or (g) to 3D print models. DiceCT scans (https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M456707) generate tomograms that can be used to evaluate anatomy of soft tissue anatomy such as (h) skeletal muscles, (i) nervous system, (j) cardiovascular system, and (k) gastrointestinal tract, as well as revealing valuable natural history such as (l) gut contents (coleopteran elytra and carapace), (m) glands (such as the femoral glands [blue] and associated pores, in red), and (n) reproductive tract with eggs. Finally, the overlap between CT and diceCT data sets can be directly compared (o). All data sets are based on UF: Herp:191433 of the cordylid lizard Ouroborus cataphractus, except panel (l), which is from CAS: Herp:199384 of the closely related Karusasaurus polyzonus.
Figure 4. Examples of non-research uses of CT scans downloaded from MorphoSource. These data have been used in museum exhibits, including (a) large format prints (from Inner Beauty exhibit at Florida Museum of Natural History [FLMNH], 2021-2023) and (b) manipulatable 3D models on touchscreens (arrow; from Fantastic Fossils exhibit at FLMNH, 2022); for education, including (c) 3D prints used in teaching comparative anatomy (photograph: Christopher Sheil), (d) learning activities posted on QUBESHub, and (e) multipart digital models hosted on Sketchfab; and by artists, such as (f) a sculptural work titled "frog" (sculpture: Margaret Honda, 2019, Carnegie Museum of Art: A. W. Mellon Acquisition Endowment Fund, 2019.71; photograph: Bryan Conley; inspired by Conraua goliath , UF: Herp:64720, https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M39477, and Pelophylax ridibunda , CAS: Herp:217695, https://doi.org/10.17602/M2/M49916), and (g) digital art of a bushmaster Lachesis muta (art: Erwin van der Minne, based on FMNH: Amphibians and Reptiles:31178, ark:/87,602/m4/M115937).
Increasing the impact of vertebrate scientific collections through 3D imaging: The openVertebrate (oVert) Thematic Collections Network

March 2024

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740 Reads

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6 Citations

BioScience

The impact of preserved museum specimens is transforming and increasing by three-dimensional (3D) imaging that creates high-fidelity online digital specimens. Through examples from the openVertebrate (oVert) Thematic Collections Network, we describe how we created a digitization community dedicated to the shared vision of making 3D data of specimens available and the impact of these data on a broad audience of scientists, students, teachers, artists, and more. High-fidelity digital 3D models allow people from multiple communities to simultaneously access and use scientific specimens. Based on our multiyear, multi-institution project, we identify significant technological and social hurdles that remain for fully realizing the potential impact of digital 3D specimens.


The macroevolutionary singularity of snakes

February 2024

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989 Reads

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8 Citations

Science

Snakes and lizards (Squamata) represent a third of terrestrial vertebrates and exhibit spectacular innovations in locomotion, feeding, and sensory processing. However, the evolutionary drivers of this radiation remain poorly known. We infer potential causes and ultimate consequences of squamate macroevolution by combining individual-based natural history observations (>60,000 animals) with a comprehensive time-calibrated phylogeny that we anchored with genomic data (5400 loci) from 1018 species. Due to shifts in the dynamics of speciation and phenotypic evolution, snakes have transformed the trophic structure of animal communities through the recurrent origin and diversification of specialized predatory strategies. Squamate biodiversity reflects a legacy of singular events that occurred during the early history of snakes and reveals the impact of historical contingency on vertebrate biodiversity.


Specimen collection is essential for modern science

November 2023

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3,847 Reads

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9 Citations

PLOS Biology

PLOS Biology

Natural history museums are vital repositories of specimens, samples and data that inform about the natural world; this Formal Comment revisits a Perspective that advocated for the adoption of compassionate collection practices, querying whether it will ever be possible to completely do away with whole animal specimen collection.


Fig. 5 P-values from procD.pgls (geomorph) analyses of real (non-trophic module) shape datasets with true corresponding ecological data (left), those from analyses of real (non-trophic module) shape datasets paired with randomly permuted ecological data (middle), and those from analyses of BM-simulated shape data paired with randomly permuted ecological data (right). P-values are lower than expected for randomly permuted real datasets, an issue exacerbated with increased sample size. Retaining everything constant but simulating the shape data under BM produces expected p-values
Summary of statistics resulting from PGLS (procD.pgls -multivariate shape data and gls -univariate shape data) and PPLS analyses. Significant results (P<0.05) are highlighted in bold
Ecological correlates of cranial evolution in the megaradiation of dipsadine snakes

September 2023

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1,113 Reads

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1 Citation

BMC Ecology and Evolution

Background Dipsadine snakes represent one of the most spectacular vertebrate radiations that have occurred in any continental setting, with over 800 species in South and Central America. Their species richness is paralleled by stunning ecological diversity, ranging from arboreal snail-eating and aquatic eel-eating specialists to terrestrial generalists. Despite the ecological importance of this clade, little is known about the extent to which ecological specialization shapes broader patterns of phenotypic diversity within the group. Here, we test how habitat use and diet have influenced morphological diversification in skull shape across 160 dipsadine species using micro-CT and 3-D geometric morphometrics, and we use a phylogenetic comparative approach to test the contributions of habitat use and diet composition to variation in skull shape among species. Results We demonstrate that while both habitat use and diet are significant predictors of shape in many regions of the skull, habitat use significantly predicts shape in a greater number of skull regions when compared to diet. We also find that across ecological groupings, fossorial and aquatic behaviors result in the strongest deviations in morphospace for several skull regions. We use simulations to address the robustness of our results and describe statistical anomalies that can arise from the application of phylogenetic generalized least squares to complex shape data. Conclusions Both habitat and dietary ecology are significantly correlated with skull shape in dipsadines; the strongest relationships involved skull shape in snakes with aquatic and fossorial lifestyles. This association between skull morphology and multiple ecological axes is consistent with a classic model of adaptive radiation and suggests that ecological factors were an important component in driving morphological diversification in the dipsadine megaradiation.


Notes from the taxonomic disaster zone: Evolutionary drivers of intractable species boundaries in an Australian lizard clade (Scincidae: Ctenotus)

July 2023

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518 Reads

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3 Citations

Molecular Ecology

Genomic-scale datasets, sophisticated analytical techniques, and conceptual advances have disproportionately failed to resolve species boundaries in some groups relative to others. To understand the processes that underlie taxonomic intractability, we dissect the speciation history of an Australian lizard clade that arguably represents a "worst-case" scenario for species delimitation within vertebrates: the Ctenotus inornatus species group, a clade beset with decoupled genetic and phenotypic breaks, uncertain geographic ranges, and parallelism in purportedly diagnostic morphological characters. We sampled hundreds of localities to generate a genomic perspective on population divergence, structure, and admixture. Our results revealed rampant paraphyly of nominate taxa in the group, with lineages that are either morphologically cryptic or polytypic. Isolation-by-distance patterns reflect spatially continuous differentiation among certain pairs of putative species, yet genetic and geographic distances are decoupled in other pairs. Comparisons of mitochondrial and nuclear gene trees, tests of nuclear introgression, and historical demographic modelling identified gene flow between divergent candidate species. Levels of admixture are decoupled from phylogenetic relatedness; gene flow is often higher between sympatric species than between parapatric populations of the same species. Such idiosyncratic patterns of introgression contribute to species boundaries that are fuzzy while also varying in fuzziness. Our results suggest that "taxonomic disaster zones" like the C. inornatus species group result from spatial variation in the porosity of species boundaries and the resulting patterns of genetic and phenotypic variation. This study raises questions about the origin and persistence of hybridizing species and highlights the unique insights provided by taxa that have long eluded straightforward taxonomic categorization.


Diversification dynamics in Caribbean rain frogs ( Eleutherodactylus ) are uncoupled from the anuran community and consistent with adaptive radiation

January 2023

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114 Reads

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2 Citations

Adaptive radiation is proposed to play a key role in generating differences in species richness among lineages and geographical regions. Due to the importance of ecological divergence in adaptive radiation, species richness is predicted to be influenced by equilibrium diversity dynamics, although the concept continues to generate much debate. An additional important question is whether radiating clades have intrinsic biological characteristics that make them particularly prone to diversify. We tackle these questions by analysing (i) the temporal patterns of diversification of Caribbean Eleutherodactylus frogs, and (ii) assembly of the complete native anuran community of the Caribbean archipelago (197 species), testing for the presence of equilibrium dynamics and whether diversification patterns of Eleutherodactylus differ from those of the rest of the Caribbean anurans. Diversification rates follow the predicted pattern of rapid diversification early in the radiation which gradually decreases towards the present. Eleutherodactylus diversification is significantly faster than that of the Caribbean anuran community, and although equilibrium dynamics influence richness of all Caribbean anurans, Eleutherodactylus shows higher carrying capacity. Our results indicate that ecological opportunity per se is not sufficient for adaptive radiation and that diverse lineages present intrinsic characteristics that enable them to make the most of available opportunity.


Figure 2. Selected phenotypic characters examined in museum specimens of Ctenotus pantherinus and their variation. A, dorsal coloration (from left to right): typical ocellated pattern, vertebral stripe, longitudinal lines, hiatus of ocelli on the vertebral region and ocelli with thick dark borders. B, condition of the plantar scales: smooth, pyramidal and with a spiny projection. C, condition of the subdigital lamellae (yellow arrows): single broad keel, single fine keel and fine medial keel flanked by two smaller parallel keels. Variation among the character states shown was often near-continuous and difficult to categorize.
Figure 3. Geographical distribution of the characters proposed to diagnose subspecies in Ctenotus pantherinus. The top left panel indicates the presumed ranges of the four subspecies as in Figure 1B: C. p. acripes (a), C. p. calx (c), C. p. ocellifer (o) and C. p. pantherinus (p). For the quantitative characters (remaining left panels), colours of circles indicate average trait values in a locality. Juveniles (< 75 mm) were not included in the snout-vent length map. For the qualitative characters (right panels), pie charts indicate the relative frequency of alternative character states in a locality. Some character states tended to be more frequent in certain regions, yet many specimens deviated from these regional trends.
Figure 5. Phylogenetic relationships in Ctenotus pantherinus and geographical distribution of inferred clades. A, phylogenetic tree based on a dataset including 85 743 nuclear single nucleotide polymorphisms from a double-digest restriction site-associated data (ddRAD) approach. B, tree based on the cytochrome b mitochondrial marker. Asterisks indicate samples from the type locality of C. p. acripes, a taxon that we deem invalid (see main text). C, geographical distributions of major nuclear clades. D, distributions of major mitochondrial clades. Nuclear and mitochondrial trees show multiple points of discordance and limited correspondence to putative population assignments to subspecies.
Summary of phenotypic character states by tentative subspecies assignment (based on presumed subspecies ranges; see main text for details) in museum specimens of Ctenotus pantherinus. Values within parentheses indicate ranges.
Subspecies at crossroads: the evolutionary significance of genomic and phenotypic variation in a wide-ranging Australian lizard ( Ctenotus pantherinus )

October 2022

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230 Reads

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5 Citations

Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

Many subspecies were described to capture phenotypic variation in wide-ranging taxa, with some later being found to correspond to divergent genetic lineages. We investigate whether currently recognized subspecies correspond to distinctive and coherent evolutionary lineages in the widespread Australian lizard Ctenotus pantherinus based on morphological, mitochondrial and genome-wide nuclear variation. We find weak and inconsistent correspondence between morphological patterns and the presumed subspecies ranges, with character polymorphism within regions and broad morphological overlap across regions. Phylogenetic analyses suggest paraphyly of populations assignable to each subspecies, mitonuclear discordance and little congruence between subspecies ranges and the distribution of inferred clades. Genotypic clustering supports admixture across regions. These results undermine the presumed phenotypic and genotypic coherence and distinctiveness of C. pantherinus subspecies. Based on our findings, we comment on the operational and conceptual shortcomings of morphologically defined subspecies and discuss practical challenges in applying the general notion of subspecies as incompletely separated population lineages. We conclude by highlighting a historical asymmetry that has implications for ecology, evolution and conservation: subspecies proposed in the past are difficult to falsify even in the face of new data that challenge their coherence and distinctiveness, whereas modern researchers appear hesitant to propose new subspecies.


Figure 2 Species composition and community diversity through time. (A) abundance of the top four most common bacteria taxa in each sampling day. Triangles represent mean abundances across bamboos, small circles are single bamboo measures. (B) Measures of Shannon diversity of the bacteria community of each bamboo on each sampling day. Full-size  DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13958/fig-2
Assembling microbial communities: a genomic analysis of a natural experiment in neotropical bamboo internodes

September 2022

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65 Reads

Microbes participate in ecological communities, much like multicellular organisms. However, microbial communities lack the centuries of observation and theory describing and predicting ecological processes available for multicellular organisms. Here, we examine early bacterial community assembly in the water-filled internodes of Amazonian bamboos from the genus Guadua . Bamboo stands form distinct habitat patches within the lowland Amazonian rainforest and provide habitat for a suite of vertebrate and invertebrate species. Guadua bamboos develop sealed, water-filled internodes as they grow. Internodes are presumed sterile or near sterile while closed, but most are eventually opened to the environment by animals, after which they are colonized by microbes. We find that microbial community diversity increases sharply over the first few days of environmental exposure, and taxonomic identity of the microbes changes through this time period as is predicted for early community assembly in macroscopic communities. Microbial community taxonomic turnover is consistent at the bacteria phylum level, but at the level of Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs), internode communities become increasingly differentiated through time. We argue that these tropical bamboos form an ideal study system for microbial community ecology due to their near-sterile condition prior to opening, relatively consistent environment after opening, and functionally limitless possibilities for replicates. Given the possible importance of opened internode habitats as locations of transmission for both pathogenic and beneficial microbes among animals, understanding the microbial dynamics of the internode habitat is a key conservation concern for the insect and amphibian species that use this microhabitat.


Fig. 5. Species richness of fishes in lakes as a function of age and area. (A) Richness as a function of the best estimate of lake age. (B) Richness as a function of lake surface area. (C) Richness as a function of lake age for 14 large lakes studied by Vadeboncoeur et al. (2011). Squares denote the three lakes that contain cichlids (Victoria, Malawi, Tanganyika). Data are from Hanly et al. (2017) and Vadeboncoeur et al. (2011).
Fig. 6. Species richness for 12 families of fishes in Lake Malawi, partitioned into total (black) and endemic (grey) numbers of species. The lake is massively enriched in cichlid fishes relative to other taxonomic groups. Importantly, this 'cichlid effect' also causes the lake to have exceptional species diversity relative to its area (Fig. 5C). Across 14 of the world's largest lakes (Fig. 5C), 75% of all fishes are cichlids, and this diversity is concentrated in just three African lakes in which cichlids have radiated. Figure based on comprehensive checklist for Lake Malawi fishes from Oliver (2019).
Fig. 7. Species richness as a function of lake age for invertebrates in 14 of the world's largest lakes. (A) Lake age and species richness for gastropods, showing a positive relationship between estimated lake age and species richness. (B) Corresponding relationship for endemic gastropod taxa only; the number of endemic species increases as a function of lake age. (C) Total invertebrate richness is uncorrelated with lake age. Lake Baikal is the oldest lake in the data set and contains many species of amphipods, gastropods, and ostracods; it appears to be much more diverse than any other lake on Earth for invertebrates (Vadeboncoeur et al., 2011). However, species richness for invertebrates in other ancient lakes is not especially great when compared to much younger lakes, even though several such ancient lakes are characterized by high proportions of endemics. Gastropod data from Seddon et al. (2011) and invertebrate data extracted manually from Fig. 5 of Vadeboncoeur et al. (2011). Invertebrate richness estimates are likely characterized by high uncertainty and the results in C should be interpreted with caution.
Fig. 8. Species richness patterns in benthic invertebrate communities from the Arctic (Laptev Sea) and Antarctic (Weddell Sea). (A) Pairwise comparison of richness for major invertebrate clades. The five most species-rich clades for both regions include the Amphipoda, Bryozoa, and Gastropoda. However, the Polychaeta are much more species-rich in the Arctic, and Porifera is much more species-rich in the Antarctic. (B) Cumulative contributions of individual invertebrate clades to total richness in the Arctic (Laptev Sea; circles) and Antarctic (Weddell Sea; diamonds). Totals for the Laptev Sea and Weddell Sea are 1414 and 1528 species, respectively. Despite the general similarity in richness for these regions, these data mask profound ecological differences, including a much greater biomass of the shelf macrobenthos in the Antarctic and greater diversity of infaunal animals in the Arctic (Sirenko, 2009). Data from Sirenko (2009).
Evolutionary time and species diversity in aquatic ecosystems worldwide

July 2022

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131 Reads

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4 Citations

Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society

The latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) is frequently described as the most dramatic biodiversity pattern on Earth, yet ecologists and biogeographers have failed to reach consensus on its primary cause. A key problem in explaining the LDG involves collinearity between multiple factors that are predicted to affect species richness in the same direction. In terrestrial systems, energy input, geographic area, and evolutionary time for species accumulation tend to covary positively with species richness at the largest spatial scales, such that their individual contributions to the LDG are confounded in global analyses. I review three diversity patterns from marine and freshwater systems that break this collinearity and which may thus provide stronger tests of the influence of time on global richness gradients. Specifically, I contrast biodiversity patterns along oceanic depth gradients, in geologically young versus ancient lakes, and in the north versus south polar marine biomes. I focus primarily on fishes due to greater data availability but synthesize patterns for invertebrates where possible. I find that regional‐to‐global species richness generally declines with depth in the oceans, despite the great age and stability of the deep‐sea biome. Geologically ancient lakes generally do not contain more species than young lakes, and the Antarctic marine biome is not appreciably more species rich than the much younger Arctic marine biome. However, endemism is consistently higher in older systems. Patterns for invertebrate groups are less clear than for fishes and reflect a critical need for primary biodiversity data. In summary, the available data suggest that species richness is either decoupled from or only weakly related to the amount of time for diversification. These results suggest that energy, productivity, or geographic area are the primary drivers of large‐scale diversity gradients. To the extent that marine and terrestrial diversity gradients result from similar processes, these examples provide evidence against a primary role for evolutionary time as the cause of the LDG.


Citations (72)


... During a large-scale project that used CT-scanning to image internal anatomy of vertebrates 7 , we discovered what appeared to be lungs in two of the same specimens collected and examined by Bickford and colleagues 5 . We soaked preserved specimens in a solution of Lugol's Iodine 7 and then CT-scanned them to generate high-resolution digital datasets of internal soft tissue anatomy of B. kalimantanensis (Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum: ZRC 12528, 12530) as well as B. busuangensis and a representative species of Bombina (Supplemental information; Table S1). ...

Reference:

The only “lungless” frog has a glottis and lungs
Increasing the impact of vertebrate scientific collections through 3D imaging: The openVertebrate (oVert) Thematic Collections Network

BioScience

... Insight from phylogenetic analysis has touched nearly every corner of biology. Examples range across natural history (Title et al., 2024), population genetics and phylogeography (Knowles & Maddison, 2002), conservation biology (Faith, 1992), public health (Giardina et al., 2017;Voznica et al., 2022), medicine (Kim et al., 2006;Lewinsohn et al., 2023), in vivo and in silico experimental evolution Moreno et al. (2023), application-oriented evolutionary algorithms Lalejini et al., 2024;Shahbandegan et al., 2022), and beyond. ...

The macroevolutionary singularity of snakes
  • Citing Article
  • February 2024

Science

... Finally, these records, housed in long-term public museums, highlight the importance of zoological collections through time and reinforce that they are timeless treasures (Koch et al. 2019), particularly in this time of rapid environmental changes, contributing to the global development of science (Nachman et al. 2023). ...

Specimen collection is essential for modern science
PLOS Biology

PLOS Biology

... Dipsadidae stands out as one of the largest family of extant reptiles (> 800 species) with nearly all its representatives restricted to the New World 1,2 . Their species richness is paralleled by their ecological diversity, ranging from aquatic, arboreal, terrestrial and cryptozoic, and including an enormous variety of diets 1,3 . Despite the relevance of this clade for the understanding of the adaptive radiations and cladogenetic events that shaped colubroideans (Colubroides sensu 4 ), the developmental processes underlying the morphological diversity within the group are still largely unknown. ...

Ecological correlates of cranial evolution in the megaradiation of dipsadine snakes

BMC Ecology and Evolution

... A fundamental test is therefore whether the processes driving the accumulation of geographic genetic structure (e.g., IBD/ IBE) are implicated in diversifying ecomorphological selection promoting divergence between the incipient phylogeographic lineages (Freedman et al., 2023;Nosil et al., 2008;Ord et al., 2020;Wootton et al., 2023). Alternatively, do other mechanisms simultaneously foster high levels of migration between these populations sufficient to promote lineage cohesion and maintain species identity (Freedman et al., 2023;Kisel & Barraclough, 2010;Prates et al., 2023;Seeholzer & Brumfield, 2018)? ...

Notes from the taxonomic disaster zone: Evolutionary drivers of intractable species boundaries in an Australian lizard clade (Scincidae: Ctenotus)

Molecular Ecology

... The most iconic examples of vertebrate radiation come from the studies of Caribbean Anolis and Darwin's finches. Nonetheless, mounting evidence from phylogenomics, anatomical, paleontological, and functional analyses have shed light in terms of documenting additional examples including neotropical cichlids, as well as multiple mammals and bird lineages (Grant 1986;Grant and Grant 2008;Tebbich et al. 2010;Lamichhaney et al. 2015;Jiménez-Ortega et al. 2023). ...

Diversification dynamics in Caribbean rain frogs ( Eleutherodactylus ) are uncoupled from the anuran community and consistent with adaptive radiation
Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

... Multiple processes can promote the evolution of intraspecific morphological diversity in several traits, including genetic drift and founder events, and local environmental variability, which in turn can determine both phenotypic plasticity and local adaptations (Losos 2000, Schluter 2000, O'Hara 2005, Runemark et al. 2010, Young and Badyaev 2010. This implies that species with wide geographic distributions, or with populations living in geographically isolated areas such as islands, may exhibit phenotypic variation across their range (Werner and Sherry 1987, Renaud and Millien 2001, Donihue et al. 2016, Prates et al. 2023. These differences result in the presence of phenotypically diverse populations, which have often stimulated their recognition as distinct subspecies. ...

Subspecies at crossroads: the evolutionary significance of genomic and phenotypic variation in a wide-ranging Australian lizard ( Ctenotus pantherinus )

Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

... Overall, the positive effect of evolutionary time on species richness is constant across freshwater fish orders. This result supports previous findings (but see [72]) for distinct taxonomic levels, as observed for all freshwater fishes [19], orders like Clupeiformes [47], and families such as Poeciliidae [23], as well as for distinct spatial extents from global [19,47] to continental domains [23], and for distinct spatial grains as drainage basins [19], latitudinal bands [47] and grid-cells [23]. Finally, even though the positive effect of the evolutionary time on species richness seems to be generalized, other evolutionary and ecological drivers also influenced species richness variation of all freshwater fishes and/or individual orders. ...

Evolutionary time and species diversity in aquatic ecosystems worldwide

Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society

... Previous simulation work has shown clines in ψ to be more sensitive and robust to detecting signatures of REs and estimating their origins compared to methods based on clines in genetic diversity (Peter andSlatkin 2015, 2013), where the expansion origin is expected to be the location with the strongest positive correlation between geographic distance and ψ. This approach has been increasingly applied in recent population genetic studies as it only requires one diploid individual to be sampled per population (Zhan et al. 2014;Maisano Delser et al. 2019;Prior et al. 2020;Fifer et al. 2022;Hemstrom et al. 2022;Lesturgie et al. 2023;Singhal, Wrath, and Rabosky 2022;Walsh et al. 2022;Ioannidis et al. 2021;He, Prado, and Knowles 2017;Jaya et al. 2022). A further potential benefit of the methodology introduced in Peter andSlatkin (2013, 2015) is the use of the Time Difference of Arrival (TDoA) -a ranging technique regularly used in the Global Positioning System (GPS) that allows for the inference of range expansion origins also from unsampled geographic regions. ...

Genetic variability and the ecology of geographic range: A test of the central-marginal hypothesis in Australian scincid lizards

Molecular Ecology

... requiring evaluations of their conservation status.Ctenotus zastictus represents one of the most geographically restricted vertebrates in Australia. It is only known from an isolated belt of Eucalyptus and Triodia (50 km 2 ) on Hamelin Station Reserve and Coburn(Chapple et al. 2019;Singhal et al. ...

World Heritage lizard: population genetics and species status of the range-restricted Hamelin skink, Ctenotus zastictus

Bulletin of the Society of Systematic Biologists