The distribution and biogeography of slow worms (Anguis, Squamata) across the Western Palearctic, with an emphasis on secondary contact zones

Archive ouverte

Jablonski, Daniel | Sillero, Neftalí | Oskyrko, Oleksandra | Bellati, Adriana | Čeirāns, Andris | Cheylan, Marc | Cogălniceanu, Dan | Crnobrnja-Isailović, Jelka | Crochet, Pierre-André | Crottini, Angelica | Doronin, Igor | Džukić, Georg | Geniez, Philippe | Ilgaz, Çetin | Iosif, Ruben | Jandzik, David | Jelić, Dušan | Litvinchuk, Spartak | Ljubisavljević, Katarina | Lymberakis, Petros | Mikulíček, Peter | Mizsei, Edvárd | Moravec, Jiří | Najbar, Bartłomiej | Pabijan, Maciej | Pupins, Mihails | Sourrouille, Patricia | Strachinis, Ilias | Szabolcs, Márton | Thanou, Evanthia | Tzoras, Elias | Vergilov, Vladislav | Vörös, Judit | Gvoždík, Václav

Edité par CCSD ; Brill Academic Publishers -

International audience. The slow-worm lizards ( Anguis ) comprise five species occurring throughout most of the Western Palearctic. Although these species are relatively uniform morphologically – with the exception of A. cephallonica , which exhibits a quite unique morphology – they are genetically deeply divergent. Here, we provide detailed distribution maps for each species and discuss their biogeography and conservation based on updated genetic data and a robust distribution database. We pay particular attention to the so called ‘grey zone’, which typically represents secondary contact zones and in some cases confirmed or presumed hybrid zones. Four of the five species live in parapatry, while only two species, A. cephallonica and A. graeca from the southern Balkans occur in partial sympatry. Further research should focus on the eco-evolutionary interactions between species in contact, including their hybridization rates, to reveal deeper details of the slow-worm evolutionary and natural history.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Phylogeography of a cryptic speciation continuum in Eurasian spadefoot toads ( Pelobates )

Archive ouverte | Dufresnes, Christophe | CCSD

International audience

Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans

Archive ouverte | Dufresnes, Christophe | CCSD

International audience. The Balkan Peninsula hosts a great proportion of Europe’s biodiversity, and this is well illustrated by amphibian richness and endemism. Among them, the yellow-bellied toad Bombina variegata ...

Exploring the speciation continuum of slow worms: location and extent of the Anguis fragilis/veronensis hybrid zone in southeastern France

Archive ouverte | Dufresnes, Christophe | CCSD

International audience. With five currently recognized species that form several secondary contact zones, slow worms (Anguidae: Anguis ) offer a valuable model to study the fate of evolutionary lineages in the face ...

Chargement des enrichissements...