A monographic catalogue on the systematics and phylogeny of the South American iguanian lizard family Liolaemidae (Squamata, Iguania)
Author
Pincheira-Donoso, Daniel
Author
Scolaro, J. Alejandro
Author
Sura, Piotr
text
Zootaxa
2008
2008-06-16
1800
1
85
journal article
86426
10.5281/zenodo.6789337
4885f120-14b4-425c-acc8-f2ba6960161c
11755334
6789337
Phymaturus
genus
Most phylogenetic information available on
Phymaturus
species
has commonly been provided in studies focusing on other lizard clades (often
Liolaemus
), in which a limited number of taxa belonging to this genus are used as outgroups (
e.g.
Schulte
et al.
2000
;
Valladares
et al.
2002
;
Díaz & Lobo 2006
;
Pincheira-Donoso
et al.
2007a
). The first phylogenetic hypothesis to include a proportionally large number of
Phymaturus
species
was recently developed by
Espinoza
et al.
(2004)
. In a comparative analysis exploring the evolution of trophic niche in
Liolaemidae
lizards, these authors reconstructed, on the basis of both morphological and molecular data, the phylogenetic relationships between seven
Phymaturus
taxa (when only 12 of the current 19 species were recognized; see below). A major achievement of Espinoza
et al.
’s (2004) results was that they provided the first support to the hypothesis that these robust lizards are grouped into two main clades (
Fig. 5
), one primarily austral and Patagonian (
patagonicus
clade) and one essentially boreal and Andean (
flagellifer
clade =
palluma
clade; see
Etheridge & Savage 2003
and
Cei & Scolaro 2006
, for nomenclatural details) as had previously been proposed by
Etheridge (1995
; see also
Cei & Castro 1973
;
Cei 1986
).
More recently,
Lobo & Quinteros (2005b)
presented the only known explicit study focused on the phylogenetic relationships within the genus
Phymaturus
(
Fig. 5
). Lobo & Quinteros’s (2005b) phylogenetic hypothesis, entirely based on morphological data, incorporated the analysis of 15
Phymaturus
species
, when a total of 17 were known (in the same work, these authors provided the description of four new taxa; see below for details). Only
P. calcogaster
(
Scolaro & Cei 2003
)
,
P. verdugo
(
Cei & Videla 2003b
)
and
P. vociferator
(
Pincheira-Donoso 2004a
) were excluded from that study (although
P. dorsimaculatus
– included in that study – and
P. vociferator
appear to be conspecific; see below). Even though Lobo & Quinteros’s (2005b) phylogeny differs importantly in some aspects from Espinoza
et al.
’s (2004) tree (
Fig. 5
), it also supported substantially the hypothesis of two major clades forming the genus
Phymaturus
. In both phylogenetic hypotheses, the same Patagonian and Andean groups previously mentioned were found as independent evolutionary lines, consisting of the same subset of species (
Espinoza
et al.
2004
;
Lobo & Quinteros 2005b
;
Fig. 4
).
These recent attempts to clarify the phylogenetic relationships among
Phymaturus
species
represent substantial progress for future phylogenetic-based systematic and evolutionary research (
e.g.
see
Wiens 2004
, for details on the value of morphological based phylogenies). Nevertheless, it is also worth noting that further studies are still needed to provide additional evidence on this matter. Indeed, different authors have recognized some of the limitations that morphological-based phylogenies may imply (
Pimentel & Riggins 1987
;
Campbell & Frost 1993
;
Thiele 1993
;
Pleijel 1995
;
Wiens 1995
,
1998
,
2001
;
Strong & Lipscomb 1999
;
Scotland
et al.
2003
). For example, whereas delimitation and definition of morphological character states are difficult and sometimes arbitrary, this is not a problem for molecular variables, whose delimitation and definition is practically automatic (
Wiens 2001
). Consequently, the elaboration of
Phymaturus
phylogenetic hypotheses based on molecular dataset are desirable.
In this work, we recognize within the
Liolaemidae
family the main clades and groups detailed in figs. 2, 3, 4 and 5, and as follows
Family
Liolaemidae
Frost & Etheridge 1989
(family status according to
Frost
et al.
2001
)
Genus
Ctenoblepharys
Tschudi
Genus
Liolaemus
Wiegmann
Subgenus
Liolaemus
Wiegmann
(clade
chiliensis
)
Series
signifer
(see
Pincheira-Donoso & Núñez 2005
; also
Etheridge 1995
;
Schulte
et al.
2000
;
Espinoza
et al.
2004
)
Subgenus
Donosolaemus
Pincheira-Donoso & Núñez (2005)
(clade
archeforus-kingii
)
Line
magellanicus
Subgenus
Vilcunia
Donoso-Barros & Cei (1971)
(clade
lineomaculatus
)
Subgenus
Eulaemus
Girard
(
Schulte
et al.
2000
;
Pincheira-Donoso & Núñez 2005
)
Clade
montanus
(
Etheridge 1995
;
Schulte
et al.
2000
)
Group
reichei
(
Núñez
et al.
1998
,
2003
)
Clade
anomalus
(see
Espinoza
et al.
2004
;
Abdala 2007
)
Complex
boulengeri
(
Etheridge 1995
,
2000
)
Clade
fitzingerii
(
Etheridge 1995
;
Espinoza
et al.
2004
;
Pincheira-Donoso & Núñez 2005
)
Clade
wiegmannii
(
Etheridge 1995
,
2000
;
Cruz
et al.
2005
)
Genus
Phymaturus
Gravenhorst
Clade
flagellifer
(
Etheridge 1995
;
Lobo & Quinteros 2005b
;
Cei & Scolaro 2006
)
Clade
patagonicus
(
Etheridge 1995
;
Lobo & Quinteros 2005b
)