A phylogeny and revised classification of Squamata, including 4161 species of lizards and snakes
George Washington University · City University of New York · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The extant squamates (>9400 known species of lizards and snakes) are one of the most diverse and conspicuous radiations of terrestrial vertebrates, but no studies have attempted to reconstruct a phylogeny for the group with large-scale taxon sampling. Such an estimate is invaluable for comparative evolutionary studies, and to address their classification. Here, we present the first large-scale phylogenetic estimate for Squamata.
The estimated phylogeny contains 4161 species, representing all currently recognized families and subfamilies. The analysis is based on up to 12896 base pairs of sequence data per species (average = 2497 bp) from 12 genes, including seven nuclear loci (BDNF, c-mos, NT3, PDC, R35, RAG-1, and RAG-2), and five mitochondrial genes (12S, 16S, cytochrome b, ND2, and ND4). The tree provides important confirmation for recent estimates of higher-level squamate phylogeny based on molecular data (but with more limited taxon sampling), estimates that are very different from previous morphology-based hypotheses. The tree also includes many relationships that differ from previous molecular estimates and many that differ from traditional taxonomy.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 102.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 215
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Squamata
- Biology
- Phylogenetics
- Phylogenetic tree
- Zoology
- Evolutionary biology
- Taxonomy (biology)
- Molecular phylogenetics
- Life in Land