Integrative Methods Reveal Multiple Drivers of Diversification in Rice Paddy Snakes

Author:

Bernstein Justin M.1,Voris Harold K.2,Stuart Bryan L.3,Karns Daryl R.4,McGuire Jimmy A.5,Iskandar Djoko T.6,Riyanto Awal7,Calderón-Acevedo Camilo A.8,Brown Rafe M.1,Gehara Marcelo9,Soto-Centeno J. Angel9,Ruane Sara2

Affiliation:

1. University of Kansas

2. Field Museum

3. North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

4. Hanover College

5. University of California

6. Institut Teknologi Bandung

7. Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense, National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN)

8. State University of New York: College of Environmental Science and Forestry

9. Rutgers University-Newark

Abstract

Abstract Divergence dating analyses in systematics provide a framework to develop and test biogeographic hypotheses regarding speciation. However, as molecular datasets grow from multilocus to genomic, sample sizes decrease due to computational burdens, and the testing of fine-scale biogeographic hypotheses becomes difficult. In this study, we use coalescent demographic models to investigate the diversification of poorly known rice paddy snakes from Southeast Asia (Homalopsidae: Hypsiscopus), which have conflicting dates of origin based on previous studies. We use coalescent modeling to test the hypothesis that Hypsiscopus diversified 2.5 mya during the Khorat Plateau uplift in Thailand. Additionally, we use ecological niche analyses to identify potential differences in the niche space of the two most widely distributed species in the past and present. Our results suggest Hypsiscopus diversified ~ 2.4 mya, supporting that the Khorat Plateau may have initiated the diversification of rice paddy snakes. We also find significant niche differentiation and shifts between species of Hypsiscopus, indicating that environmental differences may have sustained differentiation of this genus after the Khorat Plateau uplift. Our study expands on the diversification history of snakes in Southeast Asia, and highlights how results from smaller multilocus datasets can be useful in developing and testing biogeographic hypotheses alongside genomic datasets.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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3. L. How big is too big? Using crustacean-eating snakes (Homalopsidae) to test how anatomy and behaviour affect prey size and feeding performance;Jayne BC;Biol J Linn,2018

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