Abstract

We conducted partitioned and combined Bayesian and parsimony phylogenetic analyses of corytophanid lizards (Iguania) using mtDNA, gross morphology, and sperm ultrastructure data sets. Bayesian and parsimony hypotheses showed little disagreement. The combined analysis, but not any of the partitioned ones, showed strong support for the monophyly of Corytophanidae and its three genera, Basiliscus, Corytophanes, and Laemanctus. Basiliscus is the sister taxon of a well‐supported clade formed by Corytophanes and Laemanctus. The relationships of species within Basiliscus and Corytophanes received weak support, regardless of the method used. We defend those relationships as feasible and open to further testing. Data derived from the ultrastructure of spermatozoa are potentially a good source of characters for systematic inferences of Iguania and its major lineages. A Brooks Parsimony Analysis based on the geographic distributions of corytophanids and the phylogenetic tree obtained from the combined analysis suggested a Central American origin of the group, a recent colonization of northern South America, and the role of epeirogenic uplifts and the formation of lowlands during the late Tertiary in the differentiation of corytophanids.

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