Coalescent Species Delimitation in Milksnakes (genus Lampropeltis) and Impacts on Phylogenetic Comparative Analyses
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Author Affiliations
- ↵*Corresponding author: email:sruane@amnh.org; phone: (212)-769-5734
- Received August 21, 2012.
- Revision received June 12, 2013.
- Revision received November 2, 2013.
- Revision received November 19, 2013.
- Accepted November 27, 2013.
Abstract
Both gene-tree discordance and unrecognized diversity are sources of
error for accurate estimation of species trees, and can affect downstream
diversification analyses by obscuring the correct number of nodes, their
density, and the lengths of the branches subtending them. While the theoretical
impact of gene-tree discordance on evolutionary analyses has been examined
previously, the effect of unsampled and cryptic diversity has not. Here, we
examine how delimitation of previously unrecognized diversity in the milksnake
(Lampropeltis triangulum) and use of a species-tree approach affects
both estimation of the Lampropeltis phylogeny and comparative analyses
with respect to the timing of diversification. Coalescent species delimitation
indicates that L. triangulum is not monophyletic and that there are
multiple species of milksnake, which increases the known species diversity in
the genus Lampropeltis by 40%. Both genealogical and temporal
discordance occurs between gene trees and the species tree, with evidence that
mtDNA introgression is a main factor. This discordance is further manifested in
the preferred models of diversification, where the concatenated gene tree
strongly supports an early burst of speciation during the Miocene, in contrast
to species-tree estimates where diversification follows a birth-death model and
speciation occurs mostly in the Pliocene and Pleistocene. This study highlights
the crucial interaction among coalescent-based phylogeography and species
delimitation, systematics, and species diversification analyses.
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