Abstract

The lacertid genus Pedioplanis is a moderately speciose group of small-bodied, cryptically-colored lizards found in arid habitats throughout southern Africa. Previous phylogenetic work on Pedioplanis has determined its placement within the broader context of the Lacertidae, but interspecific relations within the genus remain unsettled, particularly within the P. undata species complex, a group largely endemic to Namibia. We greatly expanded taxon sampling for members of the P. undata complex and other Pedioplanis, and generated molecular sequence data from 1,937 bp of mtDNA (ND2 and cytb) and 2,015 bp of nDNA (KIF24, PRLR, RAG-1) which were combined with sequences from GenBank resulting in a final dataset of 455 individuals. Both maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses recover similar phylogenetic results and reveal the polyphyly of P. undata and P. inornata as presently construed. We confirm that P. husabensis is sister to the group comprising the P. undata complex plus the Angolan sister species P. huntleyi + P. haackei and demonstrate that P. benguelensis lies outside of this clade in its entirety. The complex itself comprises six species including P. undata, P. inornata, P. rubens, P. gaerdesi and two previously undescribed entities. Based on divergence date estimates, the P. undata species complex began diversifying in the late Miocene (5.3 ± 1.6 MYA) with the most recent cladogenetic events dating to the Pliocene (2.6 ± 1.0 MYA), making this assemblage relatively young compared to the genus Pedioplanis as a whole, the origin of which dates back to the mid-Miocene (13.5 ± 1.8 MYA). Using an integrative approach, we here describe Pedioplanis branchisp. nov. and Pedioplanis mayerisp. nov. representing northern populations previously assigned to P. inornata and P. undata, respectively. These entities were first flagged as possible new species by Berger-Dell’mour and Mayer over thirty years ago but were never formally described. The new species are supported chiefly by differences in coloration and by unique amino acid substitutions. We provide comprehensive maps depicting historical records based on museum specimens plus new records from this study for all members of the P. undata complex and P. husabensis. We suggest that climatic oscillations of the Upper Miocene and Pliocene-Pleistocene era in concert with the formation of biogeographic barriers have led to population isolation, gene flow restrictions and ultimately cladogenesis in the P. undata complex.

Highlights

  • The Lacertidae is a large family of Old World lizards with a center of diversity in southern Africa, in xerothermic habitats (Arnold et al 2007; Mayer and Pavlicev 2007; Garcia-Porta et al 2019)

  • Within the concatenated nuclear tree P. benguelensis, P. husabensis and P. rubens were found to be monophyletic with strong support (P. benguelensis: PP = 1.0, BS = 100%; P. husabensis: PP = 1.0, BS = 100%; P. rubens: PP = 0.85, BS = 100%)

  • Members of the P. undata species complex are allopatrically distributed in regions of Namibia that are ecologically distinct; we suggest that apparent color variation both among and within species may be a result of differences in habitat and associated selective pressures

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Summary

Introduction

The Lacertidae is a large family of Old World lizards with a center of diversity in southern Africa, in xerothermic habitats (Arnold et al 2007; Mayer and Pavlicev 2007; Garcia-Porta et al 2019). Overall, this family has a conservative general morphology and the degree of homoplasy and convergence in external features is very high, especially in predominantly arid-zone lineages (Borsuk-Bialynicka et al 1999; Hipsley and Müller 2017). All are similar in size (adult SVL 40–56 mm) and overall body form, but exhibit differences in dorsal patterning and coloration, arrangement of scales in the lower eyelid, and geographic distribution (Mayer and Berger-Dell’mour 1987; Branch 1998; Makokha et al 2007)

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