Publications by authors named "Inigo MartInez-Solano"

European marbled newts come in two species that have abutting ranges. The northern species, Triturus marmoratus, is found in France and the northern part of the Iberian Peninsula, whereas the southern species, T. pygmaeus, is found in the southwestern corner of the Iberian Peninsula.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the face of habitat loss, preserving functional connectivity is essential to maintain genetic diversity and the demographic dynamics required for the viability of biotic communities. This requires knowledge of the dispersal behaviour of target species, which can be modelled as kernels, or probability density functions of dispersal distances at increasing geographic distances. We present an integrative approach to investigate the relationships between genetic connectivity and demographic parameters in organisms with low vagility focusing on five syntopic pond-breeding amphibians.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The advent of genomic methods allows us to revisit the evolutionary history of organismal groups for which robust phylogenies are still lacking, particularly in species complexes that frequently hybridize. In this study, we conduct RAD-sequencing (RAD-seq) analyses of midwife toads (genus Alytes), an iconic group of western Mediterranean amphibians famous for their parental care behavior, but equally infamous for the difficulties to reconstruct their evolutionary history. Through admixture and phylogenetic analyses of thousands of loci, we provide a comprehensive phylogeographic framework for the A.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Context: Robust assessment of functional connectivity in amphibian population networks is essential to address their global decline. The potential of graph theory to characterize connectivity among amphibian populations has already been confirmed, but the movement data on which modelled graphs rely are often scarce and inaccurate. While probabilistic methods that account for intraspecific variability in dispersal better reflect the biological reality of functional connectivity, they must be informed by systematically recorded individual movement data, which are difficult to obtain for secretive taxa like amphibians.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study explores the aging rates and longevity of ectothermic tetrapods, specifically nonavian reptiles and amphibians, using data from 107 wild populations across 77 species.
  • It investigates how factors like thermoregulatory methods, environmental temperature, and life history strategies influence demographic aging among these animals.
  • The findings reveal that ectotherms exhibit more diverse aging rates than endotherms and show instances of negligible aging, highlighting the importance of studying these species to better understand the evolution of aging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sex-related differences in mortality are widespread in the animal kingdom. Although studies have shown that sex determination systems might drive lifespan evolution, sex chromosome influence on aging rates have not been investigated so far, likely due to an apparent lack of demographic data from clades including both XY (with heterogametic males) and ZW (heterogametic females) systems. Taking advantage of a unique collection of capture-recapture datasets in amphibians, a vertebrate group where XY and ZW systems have repeatedly evolved over the past 200 million years, we examined whether sex heterogamy can predict sex differences in aging rates and lifespans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The genetic architecture of speciation, i.e., how intrinsic genomic incompatibilities promote reproductive isolation (RI) between diverging lineages, is one of the best-kept secrets of evolution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Proteins encoded by antigen-processing genes (APGs) provide major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I (MHC-I) with antigenic peptides. In mammals, polymorphic multigenic MHC-I family is served by monomorphic APGs, whereas in certain nonmammalian species both MHC-I and APGs are polymorphic and coevolve within stable haplotypes. Coevolution was suggested as an ancestral gnathostome feature, presumably enabling only a single highly expressed classical MHC-I gene.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genetic diversity feeds the evolutionary process and allows populations to adapt to environmental changes. However, we still lack a thorough understanding of why hotspots of genetic diversity are so 'hot'. Here, we analysed the relative contribution of bioclimatic stability and genetic admixture between divergent lineages in shaping spatial patterns of genetic diversity in the common toad Bufo bufo along the Italian peninsula.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The salamander genus Salamandra is found in Europe, North Africa, and the Near East, known for its diverse colors and reproductive strategies, but its evolutionary relationships and classifications are complex and debated.
  • - A phylogenomic study found all recognized species within the genus to be distinct, confirming their classification as monophyletic, while also indicating that some subspecies, particularly of S. salamandra, may need taxonomic revision due to their poorly differentiated genetic markers.
  • - The research is crucial for conservation efforts, especially as S. salamandra faces significant population declines due to the chytrid fungus, highlighting the need for accurate species delineation to protect these amphibians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reduced representation genome sequencing has popularized the application of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to address evolutionary and conservation questions in nonmodel organisms. Patterns of genetic structure and diversity based on SNPs often diverge from those obtained with microsatellites to different degrees, but few studies have explicitly compared their performance under similar sampling regimes in a shared analytical framework. We compared range-wide patterns of genetic structure and diversity in two amphibians endemic to the Iberian Peninsula: and based on microsatellite (18 and 14 loci) and SNP (15,412 and 33,140 loci) datasets of comparable sample size and spatial extent.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protected-area systems should conserve intraspecific genetic diversity. Because genetic data require resources to obtain, several approaches have been proposed for generating plans for protected-area systems (prioritizations) when genetic data are not available. Yet such surrogate-based approaches remain poorly tested.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Telomere shortening with age has been documented in many organisms, but few studies have reported telomere length measurements in amphibians, and no information is available for growth after metamorphosis, nor in wild populations. We provide both cross-sectional and longitudinal evidence of net telomere attrition with age in a wild amphibian population of natterjack toads (). Based on age-estimation by skeletochronology and qPCR telomere length measurements in the framework of an individual-based monitoring programme, we confirmed telomere attrition in recaptured males.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the declining population of the Iberian painted frog (Discoglossus galganoi) in Spain and Portugal using a combination of capture-mark-recapture and genetic data to assess demographic dynamics.
  • Significant population decreases of over 50% were observed between the 2018 and 2019 breeding seasons, likely linked to lower rainfall, alongside low effective population sizes and evidence of polygamous breeding behaviors in the species.
  • This integrative approach offers crucial insights into the frog's reproductive biology and genetic diversity, which have been largely unexplored in prior research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Natural populations often persist at the landscape scale as metapopulations, with breeding units (subpopulations) experiencing temporal extinction and recolonization events. Important parameters to forecast population viability in these systems include the ratio of the effective number of breeders (N ) to the total number of adults (N ) and migration rates among subpopulations. Here, we present the results of a 10-year integrative monitoring program of a metapopulation of the Iberian green frog (Pelophylax perezi) in central Spain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subdivided Pleistocene glacial refugia, best known as "refugia within refugia", provided opportunities for diverging populations to evolve into incipient species and/or to hybridize and merge following range shifts tracking the climatic fluctuations, potentially promoting extensive cytonuclear discordances and "ghost" mtDNA lineages. Here, we tested which of these opposing evolutionary outcomes prevails in northern Iberian areas hosting multiple historical refugia of common frogs (Rana cf. temporaria), based on a genomic phylogeography approach (mtDNA barcoding and RAD-sequencing).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Molecular ecologists often rely on phylogenetic evidence for assessing the species-level systematics of newly discovered lineages. Alternatively, the extent of introgression at phylogeographic transitions can provide a more direct test to assign candidate taxa into subspecies or species categories. Here, we compared phylogenetic versus hybrid zone approaches of species delimitation in two groups of frogs from the Western Mediterranean region (Discoglossus and Pelodytes), by using genomic data (ddRAD).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The study of natural hybrid zones can illuminate aspects of lineage divergence and speciation in morphologically cryptic taxa. We studied a hybrid zone between two highly divergent but morphologically similar lineages (south-western and south-eastern) of the Iberian endemic Bosca's newt (Lissotriton boscai) in SW Iberia with a multilocus dataset (microsatellites, nuclear and mitochondrial genes). STRUCTURE and NEWHYBRIDS analyses retrieved few admixed individuals, which classified as backcrosses involving parental individuals of the south-western lineage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The canonical model of sex-chromosome evolution predicts that, as recombination is suppressed along sex chromosomes, gametologs will progressively differentiate, eventually becoming heteromorphic. However, there are numerous examples of homomorphic sex chromosomes across the tree of life. This homomorphy has been suggested to result from frequent sex-chromosome turnovers, yet we know little about which forces drive them.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ratio of the effective number of breeders () to the adult census size (), /, approximates the departure from the standard capacity of a population to maintain genetic diversity in one reproductive season. This information is relevant for assessing population status, understanding evolutionary processes operating at local scales, and unraveling how life-history traits affect these processes. However, our knowledge on / ratios in nature is limited because estimation of both parameters is challenging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Much progress in speciation research stems from documenting patterns of morphological and genetic variation in hybrid zones. Contrasting patterns of marker introgression in different sections of the contact can provide valuable insights on the relative importance of various evolutionary mechanisms maintaining species differences in the face of hybridization and gene flow and on hybrid zone temporal and spatial dynamics. We studied species interactions in the common toads Bufo bufo and B.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comparative landscape genetics studies can provide key information to implement cost-effective conservation measures favouring a broad set of taxa. These studies are scarce, particularly in Mediterranean areas, which include diverse but threatened biological communities. Here, we focus on Mediterranean wetlands in central Iberia and perform a multi-level, comparative study of two endemic pond-breeding amphibians, a salamander (Pleurodeles waltl) and a toad (Pelobates cultripes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parsley frogs (Pelodytes) comprise the only genus in the family Pelodytidae, an ancient anuran lineage that split from their closest relatives over 140 million years ago. Pelodytes is a Palearctic group restricted to Western Eurasia including three extant species: the eastern species P. caucasicus, endemic to the Caucasus area, and two closely related species inhabiting Western Europe: the Iberian endemic P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent advances in species distribution models and phylogeographic studies enable the reconstruction of complex biogeographic histories, exemplified by research on the Iberian ribbed newt (Pleurodeles waltl).
  • A significant east-west phylogeographic break was identified in Iberian populations, linked to geological changes from the formation of the Guadalquivir river basin during the Plio-Pleistocene.
  • North African populations displayed unique mitochondrial DNA haplotypes and were genetically connected to Iberian lineages, suggesting that these populations originated from dispersal events from the Iberian Peninsula during the Pleistocene, followed by gene flow in recent times.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF