Caenophidian snakes include the file snake genus
Acrochordus
and
advanced colubroidean snakes that radiated mainly during the Neogene. Although
caenophidian snakes are a well-supported clade, their inferred affinities, based
either on molecular or morphological data, remain poorly known or controversial.
Here, we provide an expanded molecular phylogenetic analysis of Caenophidia and
use three non-parametric measures of support–Shimodaira-Hasegawa-Like test
(SHL), Felsentein (FBP) and transfer (TBE) bootstrap measures–to evaluate the
robustness of each clade in the molecular tree. That very different alternative
support values are common suggests that results based on only one support value
should be viewed with caution. Using a scheme to combine support values, we find
20.9% of the 1265 clades comprising the inferred caenophidian tree are
unambiguously supported by both SHL and FBP values, while almost 37% are
unsupported or ambiguously supported, revealing the substantial extent of
phylogenetic problems within Caenophidia. Combined FBP/TBE support values show
similar results, while SHL/TBE result in slightly higher combined values. We
consider key morphological attributes of colubroidean cranial, vertebral and
hemipenial anatomy and provide additional morphological evidence supporting the
clades Colubroides, Colubriformes, and Endoglyptodonta. We review and revise the
relevant caenophidian fossil record and provide a time-calibrated tree derived
from our molecular data to discuss the main cladogenetic events that resulted in
present-day patterns of caenophidian diversification. Our results suggest that
all extant families of Colubroidea and Elapoidea composing the present-day
endoglyptodont fauna originated rapidly within the early Oligocene–between
approximately 33 and 28 Mya–following the major terrestrial faunal turnover
known as the “Grande Coupure” and associated with the overall climate shift at
the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. Our results further suggest that the caenophidian
radiation originated within the Caenozoic, with the divergence between
Colubroides and Acrochordidae occurring in the early Eocene, at ~ 56 Mya.
We describe a new species of Amerotyphlops from an upland forest enclave in the state of Paraíba, Northeastern Brazil. The new species is distinguished from the other seven South American species of Amerotyphlops by the combination of the following characters: nasal suture incomplete; rostral scale oval and yellowish cream with some dark brown spots; four supralabial scales; three infralabial scales; rows of scales around the body 18/18/18; middorsal scales from 204 to 225; dorsum with twelve to thirteen rows of scales dark brown and belly with four to five rows of scales immaculate yellowish cream; caudal spine dark brown; subcaudal scales 8-10 in female and 11-13 in males; maximum total length 233 mm. The new species is morphologically similar to A. amoipira and A. paucisquamus, sharing 18/18/18 rows of scales around the body and a small overlap of counts of middorsal scales.
Aim
To investigate (a) historical biogeographical connections and species interchange among rain forest habitats and (b) the role of riverine barriers on population divergence and speciation in the Neotropical region.
Location
Amazonia and Atlantic Forest in South America.
Taxon
Bothrops jararacussu species group (Serpentes: Viperidae).
Methods
We inferred phylogenetic relationships within Bothrops with an emphasis on the jararacussu species group under a Bayesian framework based on six molecular loci. We also used genetic coalescent simulations and approximate Bayesian computation to infer historical demography within the jararacussu group based on tests of alternative scenarios.
Results
We found the jararacussu species group to be monophyletic. The Atlantic Forest species B. pirajai and B. muriciensis were inferred nested within this group, closely related to B. jararacussu, confirming that Atlantic Forest species form a clade. The historical demographic analyses support vicariant separation between populations of B. brazili north and south of the Amazon River during the Miocene–Pliocene border, as well as colonization of the Atlantic Forest by a northern Amazonian ancestor in the Pleistocene.
Main Conclusion
The evolutionary history of the jararacussu species group sheds light on the dynamism of Neotropical rain forests over time, with at least one event of forest expansion leading to faunal interchange between Amazonian and Atlantic forests in the Pleistocene. Moreover, tests of alternative demographic scenarios suggest that the populations of B. brazili from north and south of the Amazon River originated from a vicariant event during the Miocene–Pliocene border, in agreement with the proposed age of establishment of the modern Amazon River drainage. Our results also have taxonomic implications for these medically important venomous snakes, supporting unrecognized diversity at the species level.
We present the results of the first molecular analysis of the phylogenetic affinities of the Asian colubroid genus Sibynophis. We recovered a sister-group relationship between Sibynophis and the New World Scaphiodontophis. Although Liophidium sometimes is associated with these genera, the relationship is distant. Morphological characters that Liophidium shares with Sibynophis and Scaphiodontophis are resolved as homoplasies that probably reflect the similarities of their specialized feeding habits. The traditional subfamily Sibynophiinae is elevated to the family-level, and Scaphiodontophiinae is placed in its synonymy.
Within the diverse subfamily Dipsadinae, Imantodini represents one of the few groups distributed in North, Central and South America. The tribe comprises the genera Leptodeira and Imantodes, from which Leptodeira is the most diverse, including 15 species and 11 subspecies, distributed from southern USA to central Argentina. Taxonomy and affinities among these taxa are poorly resolved, and the phylogenetic relationships among the South American diversity were never properly assessed before. Here, we investigate the phylogenetic relationships and the taxonomic status of Leptodeira spp. based on a comprehensive multilocus dataset with emphasis in the South American radiation. Besides assessing the phylogenetic relationship and species cohesion, we also evaluate the morphological variation among the South American diversity of Leptodeira. Our results support the monophyly of Imatodini and Leptodeira, while indicating that several individuals classified as Leptodeira annulata and L. septentrionalis do not cluster together within their respective species. Moreover, specimens identified as belonging to the subspecies L. a. annulata, L. a. cussiliris, L. s. ornata and L. s. polysticta do not group together suggesting the current classification includes non‐natural groups. The analysis of morphological evidence also supports the phylogenetics results, indicating that several clades can be recognized as evolutionary units presenting distinct phenotypes. To equate the taxonomy to our results, we propose a new taxonomic arrangement for Leptodeira in which we are: (1) redefining the composition of L. annulata and L. septentrionalis; (2) elevating five subspecies to species level; (3) revalidating one species; (4) recognizing four species complexes; and (5) indicating the presence of hidden diversity (probably four undescribed species). Finally, we describe a new species (Leptodeira tarairiu sp. nov.) from the open formations of South America (Cerrado and Caatinga), and we provide detailed redescriptions for all South American species of Leptodeira.
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