TY - JOUR A1 - Horreo, Jose L. A1 - Pelaez, Maria L. A1 - Suarez, Teresa A1 - Breedveld, Merel Cathelijne A1 - Heulin, Benoit A1 - Surget-Groba, Yann A1 - Oksanen, Tuula A. A1 - Fitze, Patrick S. T1 - Phylogeography, evolutionary history and effects of glaciations in a species (Zootoca vivipara) inhabiting multiple biogeographic regions JF - Journal of biogeography N2 - Location Eurasia. Methods We generated the largest molecular dataset to date of Z. vivipara, ran phylogenetic analyses, reconstructed its evolutionary history, determined the location of glacial refuges and reconstructed ancestral biogeographic regions. Results The phylogenetic analyses revealed a complex evolutionary history, driven by expansions and contractions of the distribution due to glacials and interglacials, and the colonization of new biogeographic regions by all lineages of Z. vivipara. Many glacial refugia were detected, most were located close to the southern limit of the Last Glacial Maximum. Two subclades recolonized large areas covered by permafrost during the last glaciation: namely, Western and Northern Europe and North-Eastern Europe and Asia. KW - ancestral area reconstruction KW - ancestral biogeographic region reconstruction KW - biogeography KW - glacial refuges KW - last glacial maxima KW - molecular diversity KW - phylogeny KW - post-glacial recolonization Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13349 SN - 0305-0270 SN - 1365-2699 VL - 45 IS - 7 SP - 1616 EP - 1627 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thorpe, Roger A1 - Barlow, Axel A1 - Surget-Groba, Yann A1 - Malhotra, Anita T1 - Multilocus phylogeny, species age and biogeography of the Lesser Antillean anoles JF - Molecular phylogenetics and evolution N2 - Lesser Antillean anoles provide classic examples of island radiations. A detailed knowledge of their phylogeny and biogeography, in particular how the age of species relate to the ages of their respective islands and the age of their radiation, is essential to elucidate the tempo and mechanisms of these radiations. We conduct a large-scale phylogenetic and phylogeographic investigation of the Lesser Antillean anoles using multiple genetic markers and comprehensive geographic sampling of most species. The multilocus phylogeny gives the first well-supported reconstruction of the interspecific relationships, and the densely sampled phylogeography reveals a highly dynamic system, driven by overseas dispersal, with several alternative post-dispersal colonisation trajectories. These radiations currently occupy both the outer-older (Eocene to Miocene), and the inner-younger (< 8mybp), Lesser Antillean arcs. The origin of these radiations corresponds with the age of the ancient outer arc. However, the ages of extant species (compatible with the age of other small terrestrial amniotes) are much younger, about the age of the emergence of the younger arc, or less. The difference between the age of the radiation and the age of the extant species suggests substantial species turnover on older arc islands, most likely through competitive replacement. Although extant anoles are extremely speciose, this may represent only a fraction of their biodiversity over time. While paraphyly enables us to infer several recent colonization events, the absence of the younger arc islands and extant species at the earlier and middle stages of the radiation, does not allow the earlier inter-island colonization to be reliably inferred. Reproductive isolation in allopatry takes a very considerable time (in excess of 8my) and sympatry appears to occur only late in the radiation. The resolved multilocus phylogeny, and relative species age, raise difficulties for some earlier hypotheses regarding size evolution, and provide no evidence for within-island speciation. KW - Anolis KW - Multilocus phylogeny KW - Lesser antilles KW - Species age KW - Species turnover KW - Island colonization Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.014 SN - 1055-7903 SN - 1095-9513 VL - 127 SP - 682 EP - 695 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Horreo, J. L. A1 - Breedveld, Merel Cathelijne A1 - Lindtke, D. A1 - Heulin, B. A1 - Surget-Groba, Yann A1 - Fitze, Patrick S. T1 - Genetic introgression among differentiated clades is lower among clades exhibiting different parity modes JF - Heredity N2 - Mechanisms leading to sympatric speciation are diverse and may build up reproductive isolation. Reproductive isolation among differentiated clades may exist due to genetic incompatibilities, sexual selection, differences in parity mode, reduced post-zygotic survival or reproductive success of hybrids. Here, we test whether differences in parity mode lead to reproductive isolation by investigating introgression in Zootoca vivipara, a lizard species exhibiting oviparous and viviparous reproduction. We measured introgression in transects spanning different viviparous clades, different oviparous subclades, transects containing oviparous and viviparous clades, and transects within the same subclade (control transects). Introgression in transects spanning oviparous and viviparous clades was one order of magnitude smaller than transects spanning the same reproductive mode and no statistical differences existed between transects spanning the same reproductive mode and control transects. Among types of transects, no significant differences existed in genetic and geographic distances, nor number of detected alleles. Moreover, hybrids were detected in all types of transects, showing that parity mode alone does not necessarily lead to complete reproductive isolation, which suggests that reinforcement may play an important role. The evolution of different parity modes together with reinforcement may thus promote reproductive isolation and rapid speciation, potentially explaining why only six of the almost 40,000 vertebrates belonging to groups consisting of viviparous and oviparous species exhibit bimodal reproduction. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41437-019-0201-7 SN - 0018-067X SN - 1365-2540 VL - 123 IS - 2 SP - 264 EP - 272 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER -