Stampa
Categoria: 2011

Systematics and evolution of the Australian knob-tail geckos (Nephrurus, Carphodactylidae, Gekkota): Plesiomorphic grades and biome shifts through the Miocene

Paul M. Oliver & Aaron M. Bauer

Abstract

Clades that predate the origin of biomes that they inhabit provide unique opportunities to examine both when major environmental transitions occurred, and how lineages adapted to these changes. The isolated island continent Australia has undergone a profound environmental transition through the Miocene, from relatively mesic to predominantly arid; however, we have much to learn about both the timing of this change, and how organisms may have responded to it. The family Carphodactylidae is an ancient Gondwanan group of geckos that occurs across all major Australian biomes. A multilocus (ND2, Rag-1, c-mos) phylogenetic and dating analysis of the most ecologically diverse clade within this group, the genus Nephrurus (sensu Bauer, 1990) reveals that two of three morphological taxa historically recognized (the ‘spiny knob-tails’ and ‘Underwoodisaurus’) are relatively species depauperate, pleisomorphic basal grades that diversified through the late Oligocene and early Miocene, and are now absent from most of the arid biome. Based on their deep divergence and morphological distinctiveness we recognize two lineages (milii and sphyrurus) as monotypic genera, the later of which is named herein (Uvidicolus nov. gen). In contrast, a third morphological group, the ‘smooth knob-tails,’ is a monophyletic group of five exclusively arid zone burrowing species that has radiated relatively recently (mid-Miocene). Our phylogeny indicates that successful colonization of this novel and challenging biome by Nephrurus correlates with an initial shift to terrestriality and adaptation to at least seasonally arid conditions around the early Miocene, and the eventual evolution and subsequent mid-Miocene radiation of a lineage specialized for burrowing.

In questo articolo Oliver e Bauer analizzano i generi Nephrurus e Underwoodisaurus, sia a livello genetico che evolutivo. Dal lavoro svolto dai due studiosi emerge che le due specie appartenenti al genere Underwoodisaurus sono in realtà due specie appartenenti a generi monotipici, Underwoodisaurus milii rimane appartenente al genere Underwoodisarus mentre Underwoodisaurus shyrurus viene incluso in un nuovo genere Uvidicolus.
In realtà proprio da quest'anno dal lavoro di Doughy & Oliver, il genere Underwoodisaurus non è monotipico, data la classificazione della nuova specie Underwoodisaurus seorsus.

Etimologia: Dal latino Uvidus che significa "umido" e colus che significa "dimora". Nome che deriva dall'ambiente abitato da questi gechi.

Un'ultima nota riguarda il fatto che ormai gli studiosi di tutto il mondo, anche quelli del calibro di Oliver e Bauer riconoscano a pieno il genere Underwoodisaurus, è quindi plausibile riconoscere in modo effettivo il genere Underwoodisaurus.

Per approfondire questo argomento: acquista l'articolo.