Abstract

ABSTRACT Ansorge’s Rock Skink Trachylepis ansorgii (Boulenger, 1907) is an Angolan taxon, the taxonomic distinctiveness and geographic distribution of which are poorly understood. It is closely related to the widespread Western Rock Skink T. sulcata (Peters, 1867) from Namibia and South Africa, but heretofore a lack of samples has prevented a comprehensive assessment of T. ansorgii in a molecular phylogenetic context. We combine new genetic sampling from south-western Angola, including topotypical material of T. ansorgii, with published sequences from South Africa and Namibia to identify population structure, phylogenetic relationships, and divergence dates within this species complex. A multi-locus dataset of three nuclear and two mitochondrial loci recovered significant population structuring with a centre of diversity in south-western Angola and northern Namibia. Mitochondrial data recovered seven clades representing distinct geographic populations, while the nuclear data supported either two or three deeper groupings. Mito-nuclear discordance was observed with respect to the geographic boundary between T. ansorgii and T. sulcata. The nuclear data support a break along the western Kunene River (the political boundary between Angola and Namibia), while the mitochondrial data support this break ∼250 km to the north in south-western Angola. A time-calibrated BEAST phylogeny found the deepest species-level divergence to have occurred in the late Miocene/early Pliocene (∼6 mya), potentially related to the formation of the Kunene River. Our results support the recognition of both taxa at the species level, and add further evidence that south-western Angola is a centre of reptile diversity.

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