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Kabupaten Nias Selatan

Badan Riset dan Inovasi Nasional

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07-11-2022

12-08-2024

596dd8f9-f03e-40f6-8d64-d6211f76d6ce

Dataset Serupa
Recent rapid speciation and ecomorph divergence in Indo-Australian sea snakes

The viviparous sea snakes (Hydrophiinae) are a young radiation of at least 62 sp...

Multilocus Phylogeography Of The Sea Snake Hydrophis Curtus Reveals Historical V...

The Indo-Australian archipelago (IAA) supports the world’s highest diversity of ...

The importance of the Banda Sea for tuna fisheries : A review of studies on the ...

Tuna exploitation in the Banda Sea has been started when Indonesia government ga...

The Moluccan Short-Tailed Snakes of the Genus Brachyorrhos Kuhl (Squamata: Serpe...

Brachyorrhos Kuhl represents a terrestrial, fangless, vermivorous clade of the H...

Geographic differentiation of Ganaspis xanthopoda (Hymenoptera: Figitidae), with...

This study aims to clarify geographic differentiation of Ganaspis xanthopoda and...

INFORMASI: Data berikut ini masih dalam proses pemenuhan Prinsip SDI.

Multilocus phylogeny and recent rapid radiation of the viviparous sea snakes (Elapidae: Hydrophiinae)

Terbatas

The viviparous sea snakes (Hydrophiinae: Hydrophiini) comprise a young but morphologically and ecologically diverse clade distributed throughout the Indo-Pacific. Despite presenting a very promising model for marine diversification studies, many relationships among the 62 species and 16 genera in Hydrophiini remain unresolved. Here, we extend previous taxonomic and genomic sampling for Hydrophiini using three mitochondrial fragments and five nuclear loci for multiple individuals of 39 species in 15 genera. Our results highlight many of the impediments to inferring phylogenies in recent rapid radiations, including low variation at all five nuclear markers, and conflicting relationships supported by mitochondrial and nuclear trees. However, concatenated Bayesian and likelihood analyses, and a multilocus coalescent tree, recovered concordant support for primary clades and several previously unresolved inter-specific groupings. The Aipysurus group is monophyletic, with egg-eating specialists forming separate, early-diverging lineages. All three monotypic semi-aquatic genera (Ephalophis, Parahydrophis and Hydrelaps) are robustly placed as early diverging lineages along the branch leading to the Hydrophis group, with Ephalophis recovered as sister to Parahydrophis. The molecular phylogeny implies extensive evolutionary convergence in feeding adaptations within the Hydrophis group, especially the repeated evolution of small-headed (microcephalic) forms. Microcephalophis (Hydrophis) gracilis is robustly recovered as a relatively distant sister lineage to all other sampled Hydrophis group species, here termed the ‘core Hydrophis group’. Within the ‘core Hydrophis group’, Hydrophis is recovered as broadly paraphyletic, with several other genera nested within it (Pelamis, Enhydrina, Astrotia, Thalassophina, Acalyptophis, Kerilia, Lapemis, Disteira). Instead of erecting multiple new genera, we recommend dismantling the latter (mostly monotypic) genera and recognising a single genus, Hydrophis Latreille 1802, for the core Hydrophis group. Estimated divergence times suggest that all Hydrophiini last shared a common ancestor ∼6 million years ago, but that the majority of extant lineages diversified over the last ∼3.5 million years. The core Hydrophis group is a young and rapidly speciating clade, with 26 sampled species and 9 genera and dated at only ∼1.5–3 million years old. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2013, vol.66, no. 3, pp. 575 - 591.

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