Abstract

BackgroundPodarcis tiliguerta is a wall lizard endemic to the Mediterranean islands of Corsica and Sardinia. Previous findings of high mtDNA and morphological diversity have led to the suggestion that it may represent a species complex. Here, we analysed mitochondrial and nuclear markers (mtDNA, 3110 bp; 6 nDNA loci, 3961 bp) in P. tiliguerta sampled from thirty-two localities across Corsica and Sardinia.ResultsWe find much greater intraspecific genetic divergence than between sister species of other Mediterranean island Podarcis, i.e., between P. lilfordi and P. pityusensis. We detected three mtDNA clusters in Corsica (North, South-East and South-West) and either two or three in Sardinia (North vs. South) depending on the clustering method. Only one or two nDNA groups were identified within each main island (again, depending on the method). A Bayesian time-calibrated multispecies coalescent tree was obtained from mtDNA and provided statistical support for a Miocene origin of the species (13.87 Ma, 95% HPD: 18.30–10.77 Ma). The posterior mean divergence time for the Corsican and Sardinian lineages was 12.75 Ma ago (95% HPD: 16.94–9.04 Ma).ConclusionThe results support the evolutionary distinctiveness of Corsican and Sardinian populations and also indicate a lack of post-divergence migration despite periods of contact being possible. Further to this, species delimitation analyses of Corsican and Sardinian lineages provided statistical support for their recognition as distinct (sister) taxa. Our results provide new insights into the biogeography of the Mediterranean biodiversity hotspot, and contribute important findings relevant to the systematics and evolution of this speciose lizard genus.

Highlights

  • Podarcis tiliguerta is a wall lizard endemic to the Mediterranean islands of Corsica and Sardinia

  • This was subsequently lost connections between the Corsica–Sardinia archipelago and Europe and North Africa were re-established through desiccation of the Mediterranean basin during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC; 5.96–5.33 Ma) [9, 10]

  • The mean pairwise differences for comparable mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) regions is more than four times higher than in P. lilfordi, and is almost 22 times greater than in P. filfolensis or P. pityusensis

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Summary

Introduction

Podarcis tiliguerta is a wall lizard endemic to the Mediterranean islands of Corsica and Sardinia. Islands provide many of the world’s biodiversity hotspots They continuously generate new species with the term “speciation machines” having been coined to describe this phenomenon [1]. These high speciation rates are facilitated by specific island characteristics that lead to a wealth of ecological, biogeographic and evolutionary processes. The Tyrrhenian region within the Mediterranean is diverse due to the influence of complex paleogeographical and historical factors [4, 5] It includes Sardinia and Corsica, two of the largest and highest (1834 m and 2710 m, respectively), Mediterranean Islands, which are separated by a strait of only 11 km. Corsica and Rodríguez et al BMC Evolutionary Biology (2017) 17:27

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