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Cryptic diversity in Rhampholeon boulengeri (Sauria: Chamaeleonidae), a pygmy chameleon from the Albertine Rift biodiversity hotspot. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biogeographic barriers in the Central African highlands limit gene flow among species, influencing divergence patterns across various populations.
  • A study on the Central African pygmy chameleon identified it as a complex of at least six distinct species, highlighting unrecognized cryptic diversity.
  • Findings suggest that both geographical isolation and elevational differentiation contributed to these species' divergence, with significant diversification occurring during the Miocene, emphasizing the need to explore hidden diversity in widespread species for better understanding of biodiversity patterns.

Article Abstract

Several biogeographic barriers in the Central African highlands have reduced gene flow among populations of many terrestrial species in predictable ways. Yet, a comprehensive understanding of mechanisms underlying species divergence in the Afrotropics can be obscured by unrecognized levels of cryptic diversity, particularly in widespread species. We implemented a multilocus phylogeographic approach to examine diversity within the widely distributed Central African pygmy chameleon, Rhampholeon boulengeri. Gene-tree analyses coupled with a comparative coalescent-based species delimitation framework revealed R. boulengeri as a complex of at least six genetically distinct species. The spatiotemporal speciation patterns for these cryptic species conform to general biogeographic hypotheses supporting vicariance as the main factor behind patterns of divergence in the Albertine Rift, a biodiversity hotspot in Central Africa. However, we found that parapatric species and sister species inhabited adjacent habitats, but were found in largely non-overlapping elevational ranges in the Albertine Rift, suggesting that differentiation in elevation was also an important mode of divergence. The phylogeographic patterns recovered for the genus-level phylogeny provide additional evidence for speciation by isolation in forest refugia, and dating estimates indicated that the Miocene was a significant period for this diversification. Our results highlight the importance of investigating cryptic diversity in widespread species to improve understanding of diversification patterns in environmentally diverse regions such as the montane Afrotropics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6010225PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2017.11.015DOI Listing

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