Cutting the Gordian Knot: Phylogenetic and ecological diversification of the Mesalina brevirostris species complex (Squamata, Lacertidae)
Author
Jiří Šmíd
Author
Jiří Moravec
Author
Václav Gvoždík
Author
Jan Štundl
Author
Daniel Frynta
Author
Petros Lymberakis
Author
Paschalia Kapli
Author
Thomas Wilms
Author
Andreas Schmitz
Author
Mohammed Shobrak
Author
Saeed Hosseinian Yousefkhani
Author
Eskandar Rastegar-Pouyani
Author
Aurora M. Castilla
Author
Johannes Els
Author
Werner Mayer
text
Zoologica Scripta
2017
2017-10-31
46
6
1
30
journal article
10.1111/zsc.12254
44b12099-59c0-4c00-b34c-c4f14d37ec56
1037920
Taxonomy of
Mesalina
The taxonomy of the genus
Mesalina
has been relatively stable over the past decades compared to other Middle
Eastern
Eremiadini (e.g.,
Acanthodactylus
,
Eremias
). The last species were described in 2002 (
M. kuri
by
Joger & Mayer, 2002
; and
M. bahaeldini
by
Segoli et al., 2002
). The taxonomic adjustments recommended herein emphasise how the diversity of a relatively well-known species may actually be underestimated.
Mesalina saudiarabica
sp. n.
described here from western Arabia contributes to the intensively growing knowledge on the evolution and systematics of the pan-Arabian reptile fauna within the last years (
Carranza et al., 2016
;
Kapli et al., 2015
;
Metallinou et al., 2012
,
2015
; de
Pous et al., 2016
;
Šmíd, Shobrak, Wilms, Joger, & Carranza, 2017
;
Šmíd, Carranza, et al., 2013
;
Šmíd, Moravec, et al., 2013
;
Šmíd et al., 2015
;
Tamar, Carranza, et al., 2016
;
Tamar, Scholz, et al., 2016
). As some of the studies show, cryptic and previously unrecognised species are present along the western Arabian mountains, and more species descriptions from there may thus be expected.
For future taxonomic work on
Mesalina
,
it is important to note that
M. saudiarabica
sp. n.
is not any of Arnold’s (1980, 1986c) undescribed south Arabian species (
Mesalina
sp. A from the mountains of Yemen and Saudi Arabia and
M
. sp. B from Dhofar, Oman). Its presence was not recorded until the material for recent phylogenetic studies (
Kapli et al., 2015
; this study) had become available. Further effort should be dedicated to obtaining genetic data from the two supposedly new species mentioned by
Arnold (1980
,
1986c
) as well as from two narrowranging species that have not yet been analysed genetically and placed in a phylogenetic framework,
M. ayunensis
and
M. ercolinii
(Lanza & Poggesi, 1975)
. Such data may shed new light on the evolutionary history and hopefully help to untangle relationships within some of the other
Mesalina
species complexes.