The roles of vicariance and dispersal in the differentiation of two species of the Rhinella marina species complex

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2019.106723Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Evolutionary models support Pleistocene divergence between lineages.

  • Evident mito-nuclear discordance was observed.

  • Andes mountains indirectly acted as a porous barrier to dispersal.

  • We provide support to the taxonomic status of R. horribilis.

Abstract

The high levels of Neotropical biodiversity are commonly associated with the intense Neogene-Quaternary geological events and climate dynamics. Here, we investigate the evolutionary history of two species of Neotropical closely related amphibians (R. horribilis and R. marina). We combine published data with new mitochondrial DNA sequences and multiple nuclear markers, including 12 microsatellites. The phylogenetic analyses showed support for grouping the samples in two main clades; R. horribilis (Central America and Mexico) and R. marina (South America east of the Andes). However, the phylogenetic inferences also show an evident mito-nuclear discordance. We use Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) to test the role of different events in the diversification between the two groups recovered. We found that both species were affected primarily by a recent Pleistocene divergence, which was similar to the divergence estimate revealed by the Isolation-with-Migration model, under persistent bidirectional gene flow through time. We provide the first evidence that R. horribilis is differentiated from the South American R. marina at the nuclear level supporting the taxonomic status of R. horribilis, which has been controversial for more than a century.

Keywords

Cane toad
Andes
ABC
Mito-nuclear discordance
Gene flow

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