English
Español
Log In
Email address
Password
Log in
Have you forgotten your password?
Communities & Collections
Research Outputs
Projects
Researchers
Statistics
Investigación Indoamérica
English
Español
Log In
Email address
Password
Log in
Have you forgotten your password?
Home
CRIS
Publications
Total-evidence phylogeny and evolutionary morphology of New World pitvipers (Serpentes: Viperidae: Crotalinae)
Export
Statistics
Options
Total-evidence phylogeny and evolutionary morphology of New World pitvipers (Serpentes: Viperidae: Crotalinae)
Journal
Cladistics
Date Issued
2023
Author(s)
Carrasco P.A.
Koch C.
Grazziotin F.G.
Venegas P.J.
Chaparro J.C.
Scrocchi G.J.
Salazar Valenzuela, David
Centro de Investigación de la Biodiversidad y Cambio Climático
Leynaud G.C.
Mattoni C.I.
Type
Article
DOI
10.1111/cla.12522
URL
https://cris.indoamerica.edu.ec/handle/123456789/8248
Abstract
Crotalines (pitvipers) in the Americas are distributed from southern Canada to southern Argentina, and are represented by 13 genera and 163 species that constitute a monophyletic group. Their phylogenetic relationships have been assessed mostly based on DNA sequences, while morphological data have scarcely been used for phylogenetic inquiry. We present a total-evidence phylogeny of New World pitvipers, the most taxon/character comprehensive phylogeny to date. Our analysis includes all genera, morphological data from external morphology, cranial osteology and hemipenial morphology, and DNA sequences from mitochondrial and nuclear genes. We performed analyses with parsimony as an optimality criterion, using different schemes for character weighting. We evaluated the contribution of the different sources of characters to the phylogeny through analyses of reduced datasets and calculation of weighted homoplasy and retention indexes. We performed a morphological character analysis to identify synapomorphies for the main clades. In terms of biogeography, our results support a single colonization event of the Americas by pitvipers, and a cladogenetic event into a Neotropical clade and a North American/Neotropical clade. The results also shed light on the previously unstable position of some taxa, although they could not sufficiently resolve the position of Bothrops lojanus, which may lead to the paraphyly of either Bothrops or Bothrocophias. The morphological character analyses demonstrated that an important phylogenetic signal is contained in characters related to head scalation, the jaws and the dorsum of the skull, and allowed us to detect morphological convergences in external morphology associated with arboreality. © 2023 Willi Hennig Society.
Subjects
biodiversity hotspot;...
Scopus© citations
3
Acquisition Date
Jun 6, 2024
View Details
Views
1
Acquisition Date
Nov 20, 2024
View Details
google-scholar
View Details
Downloads
View Details