Abstract

AbstractAimWidespread species found in disturbed habitats are often expected to be human commensals. In island systems, this association predicts that dispersal will be mediated by humans. We investigated the biogeographical relationships among populations of a widespread tree skink that inhabits coastal forest and human‐cultivated plantations in Southeast Asia. We sought to determine whether populations of the emerald tree skink, Lamprolepis smaragdina, dispersed via mechanisms that were not human‐mediated (‘natural’ dispersal) or whether dispersal was mediated by humans. The latter scenario predicts low levels of genetic differentiation across a species' range, coupled with a genetic signature of recent range expansion.LocationSoutheast Asia, the Philippines, Wallacea and the south‐western Pacific.MethodsWe analysed sequences of mitochondrial DNA from 204 samples collected throughout the range of this species. We use phylogenetic and population genetic methods to distinguish between predicted geographical patterns of genetic variation that might indicate natural or human‐mediated dispersal.ResultsIn contrast to predictions derived from similar studies of taxonomy and natural history, we found L. smaragdina to be characterized by highly structured and seemingly geographically stable mitochondrial gene lineages.Main conclusionsOur results demonstrate a novel pattern of widespread species distribution, never before observed in vertebrates of the Indo‐Australian Archipelago. Although this widespread and highly dispersive species is capable of long‐distance dispersal, and has a clear history of over‐water dispersal, it exhibits sharp genetic differentiation across its range. Our results suggest that random waif dispersal has been a pervasive ongoing phenomenon throughout the evolutionary history of this species.

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