Total Evidence, Sequence Alignment, Evolution of Polychrotid Lizards, and a Reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania) Author(S): DARREL R

Total Evidence, Sequence Alignment, Evolution of Polychrotid Lizards, and a Reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania) Author(S): DARREL R

Total Evidence, Sequence Alignment, Evolution of Polychrotid Lizards, and a Reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania) Author(s): DARREL R. FROST, RICHARD ETHERIDGE, DANIEL JANIES, and TOM A. TITUS Source: American Museum Novitates, Number 3343:1-39. 2001. Published By: American Museum of Natural History DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1206/0003-0082(2001)343<0001:TESAEO>2.0.CO;2 URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.1206/0003-0082%282001%29343%3C0001%3ATESAEO %3E2.0.CO%3B2 BioOne (www.bioone.org) is a nonprofit, online aggregation of core research in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences. BioOne provides a sustainable online platform for over 170 journals and books published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses. Your use of this PDF, the BioOne Web site, and all posted and associated content indicates your acceptance of BioOne’s Terms of Use, available at www.bioone.org/page/terms_of_use. Usage of BioOne content is strictly limited to personal, educational, and non-commercial use. Commercial inquiries or rights and permissions requests should be directed to the individual publisher as copyright holder. BioOne sees sustainable scholarly publishing as an inherently collaborative enterprise connecting authors, nonprofit publishers, academic institutions, research libraries, and research funders in the common goal of maximizing access to critical research. PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST AT 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10024 Number 3343, 38 pp., 6 ®gures, 1 table, 4 appendices June 22, 2001 Total Evidence, Sequence Alignment, Evolution of Polychrotid Lizards, and a Reclassi®cation of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania) DARREL R. FROST,1 RICHARD ETHERIDGE,2 DANIEL JANIES,3 AND TOM A. TITUS4 ABSTRACT Using the techniques of direct optimization and sensitivity analysis, the phylogenetics of polychrotid lizards were examined on the basis of both molecular and morphological data (ca. 1040 bp of 12S rDNA, valine tDNA, and 16S rDNA, and 82 characters of morphology). A sensitivity analysis of sequence alignment and morphological change cost functions demon- strated that equal weighting provided the most parsimonious solution for all data. The Poly- chrotidae is found not to be monophyletic, containing instead the Corytophanidae as the sister taxon of Anolis plus Polychrus. Based on these and other results over the last 12 years, the taxonomy of the Iguania is reformulated, with the Iguania composed of two subsidiary taxa, Acrodonta and Pleurodonta, the Acrodonta containing the likely paraphyletic and basally un- resolved ``Agamidae'' as well as the Chamaeleonidae, and the Pleurodonta containing the Corytophanidae, Crotaphytidae, Hoplocercidae, Iguanidae, Leiocephalidae (newly elevated from its former status as a subfamily of the Tropiduridae), Leiosauridae (new taxon including Anisolepis, Aperopristis, Diplolaemus, Enyalius, Leiosaurus, Pristidactylus, and Urostrophus), Liolaemidae (newly elevated from its former status as a subfamily of the Tropiduridae), Oplur- idae, Phrynosomatidae, Polychrotidae (restricted to Anolis and Polychrus), and Tropiduridae (excluding the former subfamilies Leiocephalinae and Liolaeminae). 1 Associate Curator, Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Herpetology), American Museum of Natural History. 2 Research Associate, Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Herpetology), American Museum of Natural History; and Professor Emeritus, Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92187±0057. 3 Research Scientist, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History. 4 Research Associate, Postlethwait Laboratory, Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 94703. Copyright q American Museum of Natural History 2001 ISSN 0003-0082 / Price $4.70 2 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 3343 INTRODUCTION ognized that taxon formally as the Polychro- The polychrotids form a large component tidae. of the lizard taxon Iguania, of which the larg- Because of its ubiquity, diversity, and availability in collections, Anolis has enjoyed est amniote genus Anolis5 (.300 species) is the polychrotids' most conspicuous member considerable attention regarding its taxono- in terms of local abundance, species diver- my and phylogeny (e.g., Cannatella and de sity, and distribution, being found from the Queiroz, 1989; Etheridge, 1959; Guyer and southeastern United States and northwestern Savage, 1986; Hass et al., 1993; Jackman et Mexico south through the Antilles and Cen- al., 1997, 1999; Poe, 1998). The remaining tral and South America to Bolivia, Paraguay, taxa within the polychrotid clade have not and Brazil. Nevertheless, Anolis (sensu lato) received much taxonomic attention in the last is only one genus in this group, with six oth- 30 years (subsequent to the summary of Pe- er smaller genera found primarily in austral ters and Donoso-Barros, 1970). Paull et al. South America. Most similar in general ap- (1976), Etheridge and de Queiroz (1988), pearance to Anolis is Polychrus, which is the Williams (1988), Frost and Etheridge (1989), only putative anole relative not restricted to Macey et al. (1997), and Schulte et al. (1998) southern South America. Polychrus is com- addressed these taxa (at least in part) as part posed of six species distributed from Nica- of larger problems of iguanian relationships. ragua to southern Brazil, Uruguay, and Etheridge and Williams (1991) reported on northern Argentina. Much less conspicuous the para-anoles. Jackson (1978) reviewed the in the literature (and in collections) are the systematics of Enyalius, and Etheridge and leiosaur polychrotids of southern South Williams (1985) provided a preliminary sum- America: Enyalius, Diplolaemus, Leiosau- mary of Pristidactylus. Other than these con- rus, and Pristidactylus. Enyalius contains six tributions, the remaining taxonomic summa- to nine species, depending on author (Eth- ries in the last 30 years have been more re- eridge, 1969; Jackson, 1978), and is found in stricted taxonomic papers: Cei (1973a) on central and southern Brazil. Diplolaemus generic limits among pristidactylines (i.e., contains three poorly distinguished Patagon- Leiosaurus, Diplolaemus, Pristidactylus, and ian species. Leiosaurus has three species [at that time recognized] Cupriguanus), Cei found in arid Argentina, and Pristidactylus, and Castro (1975) on the serology of Cupri- Pristidactylus), and Lamborot and found in western Argentina and central guanus (5 Diaz (1987) on speciation of Pristidactylus Chile, contains seven species (Etheridge and in Chile, as well as single species studies de Queiroz, 1988; Etheridge and Williams, (Cei, 1973b, on Pristidactylus fasciatus), 1985). Also found in southern South Amer- species descriptions (Donoso-Barros, 1975, ica are the para-anoles (Urostrophus and An- of Cupriguanus [ Pristidactylus] alvaroi; isolepis). Urostrophus has two species found 5 Lamborot and Diaz, 1987, of Pristidactylus disjunctly in southern Bolivia to northern Ar- volcanensis), and regional faunal works (Cei, gentina and in southeastern Brazil, and Ani- 1986, 1993; Avila-Pires, 1995). The major solepis has three species in southeastern Bra- thrust of this study is to provide a basic clad- zil, Uruguay, northeastern Argentina, and ogram of the nominal species of non-anole central Paraguay (Etheridge and Williams, polychrotids so that progress in the study of 1991). the subsidiary taxa can be promoted. Nev- The polychrotid iguanians were ®rst pro- ertheless, like any such paper our objectives posed as a monophyletic group (as the ano- are several: loid iguanids) by Etheridge and de Queiroz (1) We test the monophyly of the Poly- (1988), even though the notion of such a chrotidae, which although it has been consid- group had currency somewhat earlier (e.g., ered monophyletic by most recent authors Etheridge in Paull et al., 1976). Subsequent- (e.g., Etheridge and de Queiroz, 1988; Frost ly, of course, Frost and Etheridge (1989) rec- and Etheridge, 1989), others (e.g., Williams, 5 For our purposes we use Anolis (sensu lato) to in- 1988) have disputed this. clude Chamaelinorops, Chamaeleolis, Norops, and (2) We provide an improved approxima- Phenacosaurus (Hass et al., 1993; Poe, 1998). tion of phylogeny and a taxonomy consistent 2001 FROST ET AL.: POLYCHROTID LIZARDS 3 with that phylogeny for the polychrotids not tus, A. meridionalis, A. ortonii, A. roquet, Di- only to elucidate relationships within this plolaemus darwini, Enyalius bilineatus, E. poorly known group, but also to provide a leechii, Leiosaurus catamarcensis, L. paron- more highly corroborated outgroup structure ae, Polychrus acutirostris, P. femoralis, P. for further studies by others on the huge tax- gutturosus, P. marmoratus, Pristidactylus on Anolis. Etheridge and de Queiroz (1988) scapulatus, and Urostrophus gallardoi. and Frost and Etheridge (1989) provided a Mitochondrial genes encoding the 12S ®rst and second estimate on the intergeneric rDNA, valine tDNA, and the 59 end of the phylogeny, but these were clearly prelimi- 16S rDNA were ampli®ed using the poly- nary. merase chain reaction. Genomic DNA ex- (3) We provide the morphological evi- traction, primers, and ampli®cation protocols dence in table form, also providing our se- were identical to those in Titus and Frost quences through GenBank, so that others (1996). Ampli®ed DNA was electrophoresed may evaluate our results. on 1% agarose gels and puri®ed for sequenc- (4) We comment brie¯y on various aspects ing using the Geneclean

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