Snake Evolution In Melanesia: Origin Of The Hydrophiinae (Serpentes, Elapidae), And The Evolutionary History Of The Enigmatic New Guinean Elapid Toxicocalamus
Keywords
Australasia; Fiji; Loveridgelaps; Ogmodon; Salomonelaps; Solomon Islands
Abstract
The venomous snake subfamily Hydrophiinae includes more than 40 genera and approximately 200 species. Most members of this clade inhabit Australia, and have been well studied. But, because of poor taxon sampling of Melanesian taxa, basal evolutionary relationships have remained poorly resolved. The Melanesian genera Ogmodon, Loveridgelaps, and Salomonelaps have not been included in recent phylogenetic studies, and the New Guinean endemic, Toxicocalamus, has been poorly sampled and sometimes recovered as polyphyletic. We generated a multilocus phylogeny for the subfamily using three mitochondrial and four nuclear loci so as to investigate relationships among the basal hydrophiine genera and to determine the status of Toxicocalamus. We sequenced these loci for eight of the 12 described species within Toxicocalamus, representing the largest molecular data set for this genus. We found that a system of offshore island arcs in Melanesia was the centre of origin for terrestrial species of Hydrophiinae, and we recovered Toxicocalamus as monophyletic. Toxicocalamus demonstrates high genetic and morphological diversity, but some of the molecular diversity is not accompanied by diagnostic morphological change. We document at least five undescribed species that all key morphologically to Toxicocalamus loriae (Boulenger, 1898), rendering this species polyphyletic. Continued work on Toxicocalamus is needed to document the diversity of this genus, and is likely to result in the discovery of additional species. Our increased taxon sampling allowed us to better understand the evolution and biogeography of Hydrophiinae; however, several unsampled lineages remain, the later study of which may be used to test our biogeographic hypothesis.
Publication Date
11-1-2016
Publication Title
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Volume
178
Issue
3
Number of Pages
663-678
Document Type
Article
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.1111/zoj.12423
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
84963502754 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84963502754
STARS Citation
Strickland, Jason L.; Carter, Sharon; Kraus, Fred; and Parkinson, Christopher L., "Snake Evolution In Melanesia: Origin Of The Hydrophiinae (Serpentes, Elapidae), And The Evolutionary History Of The Enigmatic New Guinean Elapid Toxicocalamus" (2016). Scopus Export 2015-2019. 3490.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2015/3490