Manel Khammassi, Saïd Nouira, Ahmed Badry, Salah Eddine Sadine, D. James Harris
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The burrowing scorpions of the genus Scorpio Linnaeus, 1758 were considered to be a single polymorphic species, Scorpio maurus Linnaeus, 1758, distributed from West Africa across the Sahel and the Saharan highlands through the Maghreb and the Middle East, to Iran. After various revisions, the complex was treated as including 18 species and seven subspecies. Five additional new Scorpio species were recently described. However, doubts remain regarding the validity of these taxa due to the lack of reliable characters and the lack of genetic data for many species. The aim of the present study was to analyze the phylogenetic relationships and the evolutionary events that promoted diversification within the genus. Phylogenetic analyses were performed using 633 base pairs of the mitochondrial COI gene from 51 individuals collected in Tunisia, Morocco, and Egypt, combined with 74 previously published sequence data. Phylogenetic analyses revealed twenty distinct lineages forming two geographically separate clades, a Maghrebian clade and a Middle Eastern clade. Although most named species formed distinct lineages, various additional lineages were identified, highlighting potential unnamed species. Divergence time estimates indicate that the division within the genus Scorpio began during the Mid-Miocene, a period characterized by tectonic events coupled with climatic oscillations. Further differentiation occurred during the Miocene-Pliocene transition when climatic fluctuations resumed and the Mediterranean became increasingly arid. Speciation within the genus Scorpio may have been driven by the expansion of the savannas and Sahara Desert, the associated reduction of a once widespread rainforest into numerous micro-refugia in the mountains of the Mediterranean region, and by adaptation to these new habitats.
期刊介绍:
Organisms Diversity & Evolution (published by the Gesellschaft fuer Biologische Systematik, GfBS) is devoted to furthering our understanding of all aspects of organismal diversity and evolution. Papers addressing evolutionary aspects of the systematics, phylogenetics, morphology and development, taxonomy and biogeography of any group of eukaryotes, recent or fossil, are welcome. Priority is given to papers with a strong evolutionary and/or phylogenetic focus. Manuscripts presenting important methods or tools or addressing key theoretical, methodological, and philosophical principles related to the study of organismal diversity are also welcome. Species descriptions are welcome as parts of a manuscript of broader interest that strive to integrate such taxonomic information with the other areas of interest mentioned above.