Comparative phylogeography of three rainforest-restricted lizards from mid-east Queensland
Devi M. Stuart-Fox, Christopher J. Schneider, Craig Moritz and Patrick J. Couper
Australian Journal of Zoology 49(2) 119 - 127
Abstract
Several small isolates of rainforest situated on the central eastern coast of
Australia are home to a rich herpetofauna, including four endemic species of
leaftail geckos (Phyllurusspp.) and two skinks
(Eulamprus spp.). To examine the extent and geographic
pattern of historical subdivision among isolates, we assayed mtDNA variation
in two species endemic to rainforests of this region
(Phyllurus ossa and
Eulamprus amplus) and, for comparison, a more widespread
and less specialised lizard, Carlia rhomboidalis. There
is a clear genetic signature of historical changes in population size and
distribution in P. ossa that is consistent with
Pleistocene (or earlier) rainforest contraction and subsequent expansion.
Although more pronounced in the gecko, phylogeographic structure was congruent
between E. amplusand P. ossa. In
contrast to the saxicolous, rainforest-restricted
P. ossaand E. amplus, the
rainforest-generalist species, C. rhomboidalis, does not
display strong geographic population structure. The differences in genetic
population structure exhibited by the three species are consistent with
species-specific differences in ecology.
Full text doi:10.1071/ZO00092
© CSIRO 2001





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