Busca avançada
Ano de início
Entree


Texto completo
Autor(es):
Zaher, Hussam ; Trusz, Carlos ; Koch, Claudia ; Entiauspe-Neto, Omar M. ; Battilana, Jaqueline ; Grazziotin, Felipe G.
Número total de Autores: 6
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: SYSTEMATICS AND BIODIVERSITY; v. 22, n. 1, p. 28-pg., 2024-12-31.
Resumo

Although present in the South American continent, dwarf boas (Tropidophiidae) show their greatest extant diversification in the Caribbean region, reaching their highest diversity in Cuba. Despite their remarkable species richness, phylogenetic affinities among species of Tropidophis and Trachyboa are still poorly known. Here, we provide a multi-locus phylogenetic hypothesis of the family that includes 25 of the 37 known continental and insular species, including most of its highly diverse Cuban endemic radiation (16 out of 17 species sampled). We also provide a time-calibrated tree derived from our molecular data. Our phylogenetic results indicate that the genus Tropidophis and its mainland and Cuban radiations are paraphyletic, while the Caribbean radiation forms a well-supported clade. We therefore synonymize Trachyboa with Tropidophis and provide new definitions for the species groups. Our time-calibrated tree suggests that tropidophiids originated along the northwestern Andean region of continental South America, diverging from its known sister-group genus Anilius during the late Cretaceous. The Atlantic Rainforest radiation diverged from the Andean radiation during the late Eocene. A mainland tropidophiid ancestor subsequently dispersed from northern South America to the Caribbean region in the latest Eocene. Dispersal likely took place through a near-continuous terrestrial land bridge that connected South America to the Greater Antilles during the late Eocene to early Oligocene (35-33 Ma). The existence of this land bridge, whether formed by the Aves Ridge (GAARlandia Hypothesis) or by a more southernly positioned landmass connecting the Greater Antilles and the northern Lesser Antilles Ridge (GRANoLA hypothesis), remains a topic of debate, which we address in this paper. After that main dispersal event, West Indian tropidophiids underwent over ten speciation events, rapidly colonizing the Caribbean islands. We also address the vertebral morphology of fossil and extant Tropidophiidae, with our observations challenging the current classification of several fossil taxa within crown-Tropidophiidae. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 12/08661-3 - Genômica Comparada de Serpentes Insulares
Beneficiário:Felipe Gobbi Grazziotin
Modalidade de apoio: Bolsas no Brasil - Pós-Doutorado
Processo FAPESP: 02/13602-4 - Evolução da fauna de répteis no sudeste brasileiro do Cretáceo superior ao recente: paleontologia, filogenia e biogeografia
Beneficiário:Hussam El Dine Zaher
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático
Processo FAPESP: 16/50127-5 - Dimensions US-BIOTA São Paulo: scales of biodiversity: integrated studies of snake venom evolution and function across multiple levels of diversity
Beneficiário:Inácio de Loiola Meirelles Junqueira de Azevedo
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático
Processo FAPESP: 11/50146-6 - Filogeografia comparada, filogenia, modelagem paleoclimática e taxonomia de répteis e anfíbios neotropicais
Beneficiário:Miguel Trefaut Urbano Rodrigues
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático
Processo FAPESP: 21/13671-7 - Assistência para trabalhos de campo para coleta de espécimes, venenos e glândulas - com enfoque na região extremo sul do país
Beneficiário:Omar Machado Entiauspe Neto
Modalidade de apoio: Bolsas no Brasil - Programa Capacitação - Treinamento Técnico
Processo FAPESP: 22/12660-4 - Recuperação, modernização e expansão da coleção herpetológica do Instituto Butantan através de estudos integrativos sobre sistemática e evolução de serpentes neotropicais
Beneficiário:Felipe Gobbi Grazziotin
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Jovens Pesquisadores