THE EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY OF PARTHENOGENETIC CNEMIDOPHORUS LEMNISCATUS (SAURIA, TEIIDAE). I. EVIDENCE FOR A HYBRID ORIGIN
- 1 July 1990
- Vol. 44 (4) , 906-921
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1990.tb03813.x
Abstract
Chromosomes and allozymes were studied from chromosomally distinct unisexual (races B and C) and bisexual (races D and E) populations of the teiid lizard Cnemidophorus lemniscatus, and from selected outgroup taxa (C. murinus, C. nigricolor, Ameiva ameiva, and A. auberi). Karyotyping confirmed the racial identity of individuals and showed that the chromosomal composition of populations at specific localities has remained the same for 20 years. All individuals of both unisexual populations were heterozygous for a pericentric inversion that distinguishes D and E bisexuals. Also, the unisexuals were all heterozygous for 8 of 11 protein loci for which D and E were fixed or nearly fixed for different alleles. Most of these alleles represent derived states relative to the other Cnemidophorus and Ameiva analyzed, and the fixed heterozygote condition at these nine markers provides unequivocal support for the hypothesis that the unisexual C. lemniscatus arose by hybridization between ancestors genetically similar to extant D and E populations. At the remaining three loci for which D and E show fixed differences, the unisexuals were homozygous rather than heterozygous. This suggests that either (1) allozymes have been lost by mutations to null, silent, or convergent mobility states, (2) ancestral genotypes were similar to but not identical with the extant D and E races, and/or (3) limited recombination may occur between unisexual genomes. Allozyme-based genetic distances between D and E were large, suggesting that bisexual races D and E are genetically isolated; each race should be accorded full species status. This conclusion is supported by the absence of any clear biochemical evidence for their monophyly with respect to the other Cnemidophorus examined. Cladistic analyses of 17 phylogenetically informative loci revealed two equally parsimonious shortest trees, one supporting monophyly and the other paraphyly of the C. lemniscatus complex. Further testing of the monophyly of C. lemniscatus requires additional data. With the present study, the evidence that all parthenogenetic Cnemidophorus are of hybrid origin is complete.Funding Information
- National Science Foundation
- National Institutes of Health
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