Testing the island effect on phenotypic diversification: insights from the Hemidactylus geckos of the Socotra Archipelago
Islands
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine
570
Multidisciplinary
Genetic Speciation
Genetic Variation
Lizards
Biodiversity
Evolutionary ecology
01 natural sciences
Article
Phylogenetics
Evolution, Molecular
03 medical and health sciences
Phenotype
Animals
Body Size
DOI:
10.1038/srep23729
Publication Date:
2016-04-13T09:08:52Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
AbstractIsland colonization is often assumed to trigger extreme levels of phenotypic diversification. Yet, empirical evidence suggests that it does not always so. In this study we test this hypothesis using a completely sampled mainland-island system, the arid clade ofHemidactylus, a group of geckos mainly distributed across Africa, Arabia and the Socotra Archipelago. To such purpose, we generated a new molecular phylogeny of the group on which we mapped body size and head proportions. We then explored whether island and continental taxa shared the same morphospace and differed in their disparities and tempos of evolution. Insular species produced the most extreme sizes of the radiation, involving accelerated rates of evolution and higher disparities compared with most (but not all) of the continental groups. In contrast, head proportions exhibited constant evolutionary rates across the radiation and similar disparities in islands compared with the continent. These results, although generally consistent with the notion that islands promote high morphological disparity, reveal at the same time a complex scenario in which different traits may experience different evolutionary patterns in the same mainland-island system and continental groups do not always present low levels of morphological diversification compared to insular groups.
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