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Sex determination,longevity, and the birth and death of reptilian species
Authors:Niv Sabath  Yuval Itescu  Anat Feldman  Shai Meiri  Itay Mayrose  Nicole Valenzuela
Institution:1. Department of Molecular Biology and Ecology of Plants, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel;2. Department of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel;3. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa
Abstract:Vertebrate sex‐determining mechanisms (SDMs) are triggered by the genotype (GSD), by temperature (TSD), or occasionally, by both. The causes and consequences of SDM diversity remain enigmatic. Theory predicts SDM effects on species diversification, and life‐span effects on SDM evolutionary turnover. Yet, evidence is conflicting in clades with labile SDMs, such as reptiles. Here, we investigate whether SDM is associated with diversification in turtles and lizards, and whether alterative factors, such as lifespan's effect on transition rates, could explain the relative prevalence of SDMs in turtles and lizards (including and excluding snakes). We assembled a comprehensive dataset of SDM states for squamates and turtles and leveraged large phylogenies for these two groups. We found no evidence that SDMs affect turtle, squamate, or lizard diversification. However, SDM transition rates differ between groups. In lizards TSD‐to‐GSD surpass GSD‐to‐TSD transitions, explaining the predominance of GSD lizards in nature. SDM transitions are fewer in turtles and the rates are similar to each other (TSD‐to‐GSD equals GSD‐to‐TSD), which, coupled with TSD ancestry, could explain TSD's predominance in turtles. These contrasting patterns can be explained by differences in life history. Namely, our data support the notion that in general, shorter lizard lifespan renders TSD detrimental favoring GSD evolution in squamates, whereas turtle longevity permits TSD retention. Thus, based on the macro‐evolutionary evidence we uncovered, we hypothesize that turtles and lizards followed different evolutionary trajectories with respect to SDM, likely mediated by differences in lifespan. Combined, our findings revealed a complex evolutionary interplay between SDMs and life histories that warrants further research that should make use of expanded datasets on unexamined taxa to enable more conclusive analyses.
Keywords:Evolution and natural selection  life span and longevity  life history  phenotypic plasticity  sex chromosomes  sexual development  speciation  extinction  and net diversification  temperature‐dependent (TSD) and genotypic (GSD) sex determination  turtles  lizards  snakes  and squamate reptiles  vertebrate speciation and extinction
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