Species Delimitation, Phylogenomics, and Biogeography of Sulawesi Flying Lizards: A Diversification History Complicated by Ancient Hybridization, Cryptic Species, and Arrested Speciation

Author:

Mcguire Jimmy A12ORCID,Huang Xiaoting3,Reilly Sean B4ORCID,Iskandar Djoko T5,Wang-Claypool Cynthia Y12,Werning Sarah6,Chong Rebecca A7ORCID,Lawalata Shobi Z S128,Stubbs Alexander L12,Frederick Jeffrey H12,Brown Rafe M9,Evans Ben J10,Arifin Umilaela1511,Riyanto Awal12,Hamidy Amir12,Arida Evy13,Koo Michelle S1,Supriatna Jatna14,Andayani Noviar14,Hall Robert15

Affiliation:

1. Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley , CA 94720 , USA

2. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley , CA 94720 , USA

3. College of Marine Life Sciences, Ocean University of China , No. 5 Yushan Road, Qindao, Shandong, 266003 , PR China

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz , CA 95060 , USA

5. School of Life Sciences and Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung , Bandung , Indonesia

6. Department of Anatomy, Des Moines University , 3200 Grand Avenue, Des Moines, IA 50312-4198 , USA

7. Department of Biology, University of Hawaii at Manoa , Honolulu, HI 96822 , USA

8. United in Diversity Foundation, Jalan Hayam Wuruk , Jakarta , Indonesia

9. Biodiversity Institute and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd., University of Kansas , Lawrence, KS 66045 , USA

10. Biology Department, McMaster University, Hamilton , Ontario , Canada

11. Center for Taxonomy and Morphology, Zoologisches Museum Hamburg, Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change , Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, R230 20146 Hamburg , Germany

12. Laboratory of Herpetology, Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense, Research Center for Biosystematics and Evolution, National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN) , Cibinong 16911 , Indonesia

13. Research Center for Applied Zoology, National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN) , Cibinong 16911 , Indonesia

14. Department of Biology, Institute for Sustainable Earth and Resources (I-SER), Gedung Laboratorium Multidisiplin, and Research Center for Climate Change (RCCC-UI), Gedung Laboratorium Multidisiplin, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Universitas Indonesia , Depok 16424 , Indonesia

15. SE Asia Research Group (SEARG), Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London , Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX , UK

Abstract

AbstractThe biota of Sulawesi is noted for its high degree of endemism and for its substantial levels of in situ biological diversification. While the island’s long period of isolation and dynamic tectonic history have been implicated as drivers of the regional diversification, this has rarely been tested in the context of an explicit geological framework. Here, we provide a tectonically informed biogeographical framework that we use to explore the diversification history of Sulawesi flying lizards (the Draco lineatus Group), a radiation that is endemic to Sulawesi and its surrounding islands. We employ a framework for inferring cryptic speciation that involves phylogeographic and genetic clustering analyses as a means of identifying potential species followed by population demographic assessment of divergence-timing and rates of bi-directional migration as means of confirming lineage independence (and thus species status). Using this approach, phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of mitochondrial sequence data obtained for 613 samples, a 50-SNP data set for 370 samples, and a 1249-locus exon-capture data set for 106 samples indicate that the current taxonomy substantially understates the true number of Sulawesi Draco species, that both cryptic and arrested speciations have taken place, and that ancient hybridization confounds phylogenetic analyses that do not explicitly account for reticulation. The Draco lineatus Group appears to comprise 15 species—9 on Sulawesi proper and 6 on peripheral islands. The common ancestor of this group colonized Sulawesi ~11 Ma when proto-Sulawesi was likely composed of two ancestral islands, and began to radiate ~6 Ma as new islands formed and were colonized via overwater dispersal. The enlargement and amalgamation of many of these proto-islands into modern Sulawesi, especially during the past 3 Ma, set in motion dynamic species interactions as once-isolated lineages came into secondary contact, some of which resulted in lineage merger, and others surviving to the present. [Genomics; Indonesia; introgression; mitochondria; phylogenetics; phylogeography; population genetics; reptiles.]

Funder

Museum of Vertebrate Zoology

University of California

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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