Abstract

In this article, I revise the taxonomy of the species and subspecies of the genus Phrynosoma through phylogenetic and species delimitation approaches based on four mtDNA markers (ND1, ND2, ND4, and 12S). The resulting taxonomy recognizes 12 species (P. asio, P. bracconieri, P. cornutum, P. coronatum, P. douglasii, P. hernandesi, P. mcallii, P. modestum, P. orbiculare, P. platyrhinos, P. solare, and P. taurus). Several of these species are divided into subspecies as follows: P. coronatum (P. c. coronatum, P. c. blainvillii, P. c. cerroense, and P. c. frontale), P. cornutum (P. c. cornutum and P. c. bufonium), P. hernandesi (P. h. hernandesi, P. h. ditmarsi, and P. h. ornatum), P. orbiculare (P. o. orbiculare, P. o. bradti, P. o. boucardii, P. o. cortezii, P. o. dugesii, and P. o. durangoensis), P. platyrhinos (P. p. platyrhinos and P. p. goodei), P. taurus (P. t. taurus and P. t. sherbrookei). In this coherent and objective approach, those taxa treated here as subspecies have diverged to a much lesser degree than those that are herein recognized as separate species. Typically, those taxa recognized as subspecies are one another’s closest relatives (i.e., they together form a monophyletic group that represents the species) and are distributed allopatrically. In this approach, all separate evolutionarily significant units are recognized as named taxa—either species or subspecies—thereby reflecting the importance of identifying and naming such units for conservation. I provide a checklist of the recognized species and subspecies of Phrynosoma along with synonymies and distribution maps.

Highlights

  • The lizards of the genus Phrynosoma form a conspicuous component of the herpetofauna of parts of Canada, the USA, and Mexico

  • A subspecies level unit is discovered as a monophyletic group through genetic analyses with a degree of divergence significantly lower than is typical for most of the taxa in the genus that are unambiguously recognized as species level units

  • The trees obtained by Bayesian inference (BI), maximum likelihood (ML), and BEAST

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Summary

Introduction

The lizards of the genus Phrynosoma form a conspicuous component of the herpetofauna of parts of Canada, the USA, and Mexico. Due to their unique morphology, especially the more or less well developed spines on the head and the stout body shape, they are easy to recognize at a generic level. Substantial uncertainty exists as to the recognition of various taxa that are apparently closely related. This is true for the taxa in the P. orbiculare, P. douglasii, P. coronatum, and P. platyrhinos species complexes [2,3,4,11,12]

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