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Partial island submergence and speciation in an adaptive radiation: a multilocus analysis of the Cuban green anoles

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TLDR
Analysis of morphology, mitochondrial DNA and nuclear DNA in the Cuban green anoles (carolinensis subgroup) strongly supports the hypothesis that Miocene fragmentation of Cuba into three palaeo–archipelagos accompanied species–level divergence in the adaptive radiation of West Indian Anolis lizards.
Abstract
Sympatric speciation is often proposed to account for species-rich adaptive radiations within lakes or islands, where barriers to gene flow or dispersal may be lacking. However, allopatric speciation may also occur in such situations, especially when ranges are fragmented by fluctuating water levels. We test the hypothesis that Miocene fragmentation of Cuba into three palaeo-archipelagos accompanied species-level divergence in the adaptive radiation of West Indian Anolis lizards. Analysis of morphology, mitochondrial DNA (mt DNA) and nuclear DNA in the Cuban green anoles (carolinensis subgroup) strongly supports three predictions made by this hypothesis. First, three geographical sets of populations, whose ranges correspond with palaeo-archipelago boundaries, are distinct and warrant recognition as independent evolutionary lineages or species. Coalescence of nuclear sequence fragments sampled from these species and the large divergences observed between their mtDNA haplotypes suggest separation prior to the subsequent unification of Cuba ca. 5 Myr ago. Second, molecular phylogenetic relationships among these species reflect historical geographical relationships rather than morphological similarity. Third, all three species remain distinct despite extensive geographical contact subsequent to island unification, occasional hybridization and introgression of mtDNA haplotypes. Allopatric speciation initiated during partial island submergence may play an important role in speciation during the adaptive radiation of Anolis lizards.

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Bayesian Inference of Species Trees from Multilocus Data

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that both BEST and the new Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo method for the multispecies coalescent have much better estimation accuracy for species tree topology than concatenation, and the method outperforms BEST in divergence time and population size estimation.
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Ecological opportunity and the origin of adaptive radiations

TL;DR: It is proposed that ecological opportunity could promote adaptive radiation by generating specific changes to the selective regimes acting on natural populations, both by relaxing effective stabilizing selection and by creating conditions that ultimately generate diversifying selection.
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Quantifying the roles of ecology and geography in spatial genetic divergence

TL;DR: A novel application of structural equation modelling is used to quantify the contributions of ecological and geographical isolation to spatial genetic divergence in 17 species of Anolis lizards, suggesting that despite the proposed ubiquity of ecological divergence, non-ecological factors play the dominant role in the evolution of spatial genetic separation.
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The West Indies as a laboratory of biogeography and evolution.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used molecular methods to study the evolution and ecology of the West Indies and found that there is a strong role for endemic radiations and extinction in shaping patterns of diversity.
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Multiple sources, admixture, and genetic variation in introduced anolis lizard populations.

TL;DR: It is proposed that introductions follow a sequential, two‐step process involving a reduction in genetic variation due to founder effects and population bottlenecks followed by an increase in Genetic variation if admixture of individuals from multiple native‐range sources occurs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MRBAYES: Bayesian inference of phylogenetic trees

TL;DR: The program MRBAYES performs Bayesian inference of phylogeny using a variant of Markov chain Monte Carlo, and an executable is available at http://brahms.rochester.edu/software.html.
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Branch support and tree stability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantified the extra length needed to lose a branch in the consensus of near-most parsimonious trees based on the original data, as opposed to the data perturbation used in the bootstrap procedure.
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INFERRING PHYLOGENIES FROM mtDNA VARIATION: MITOCHONDRIAL-GENE TREES VERSUS NUCLEAR-GENE TREES.

TL;DR: An accurately resolved gene tree may not be congruent with the species tree because of lineage sorting of ancestral polymorphisms, but a survey of mtDNA‐haplotype diversity in 34 species of birds indicates that coalescence is generally very recent, which suggests that coalescent times are typically much shorter than internodal branch lengths of the species Tree, and that sorting of mt DNA lineages is not likely to confound the species trees.
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