The biogeography of bent-toed geckos, Cyrtodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae)

Author:

Grismer L. Lee1,Poyarkov Nikolay A.23,Quah Evan S.H.14,Grismer Jesse L.1,Wood Jr Perry L.56

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, La Sierra University, Riverside, CA, United States of America

2. Faculty of Biology, Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia

3. Joint Russian-Vietnamese Tropical Research and Technological Center, Hanoi, Vietnam

4. Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia

5. Department of Biological Sciences & Museum of Natural History, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States of America

6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America

Abstract

The gekkonid genus Cyrtodactylus is the third largest vertebrate genus on the planet with well over 300 species that range across at least eight biogeographic regions from South Asia to Melanesia. The ecological and morphological plasticity within the genus, has contributed to its ability to disperse across ephemeral seaways, river systems, basins, land bridges, and mountain ranges—followed by in situ diversification within specific geographic areas. Ancestral ranges were reconstructed on a mitochondrial phylogeny with 346 described and undescribed species from which it was inferred that Cyrtodactylus evolved in a proto-Himalaya region during the early Eocene. From there, it dispersed to what is currently Indoburma and Indochina during the mid-Eocene—the latter becoming the first major center of origin for the remainder of the genus that seeded dispersals to the Indian subcontinent, Papua, and Sundaland. Sundaland became a second major center of radiation during the Oligocene and gave rise to a large number of species that radiated further within Sundaland and dispersed to Wallacea, the Philippines, and back to Indochina. One Papuan lineage dispersed west to recolonize and radiate in Sundaland. Currently, Indochina and Sundaland still harbor the vast majority of species of Cyrtodactylus.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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