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Phylogeography of the widespread African puff adder (Bitis arietans) reveals multiple Pleistocene refugia in southern Africa
Authors:Axel Barlow  Karis Baker  Catriona R Hendry  Lindsay Peppin  Tony Phelps  Krystal A Tolley  Catharine E Wüster  Wolfgang Wüster
Institution:1. School of Biological Sciences, Environment Centre Wales, Bangor University, , Bangor, LL57 2UW UK;2. Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University, , Washington, DC, 20052 USA;3. Cape Reptile Institute, , Oudtshoorn, 6620 South Africa;4. Applied Biodiversity Research Division, South African National Biodiversity Institute, , 7735 Cape Town, South Africa;5. Department of Botany and Zoology, University of Stellenbosch, , Matieland, 7602 South Africa
Abstract:Evidence from numerous Pan‐African savannah mammals indicates that open‐habitat refugia existed in Africa during the Pleistocene, isolated by expanding tropical forests during warm and humid interglacial periods. However, comparative data from other taxonomic groups are currently lacking. We present a phylogeographic investigation of the African puff adder (Bitis arietans), a snake that occurs in open‐habitat formations throughout sub‐Saharan Africa. Multiple parapatric mitochondrial clades occur across the current distribution of B. arietans, including a widespread southern African clade that is subdivided into four separate clades. We investigated the historical processes responsible for generating these phylogeographic patterns in southern Africa using species distribution modelling and genetic approaches. Our results show that interior regions of South Africa became largely inhospitable for B. arietans during glacial maxima, whereas coastal and more northerly areas remained habitable. This corresponds well with the locations of refugia inferred from mitochondrial data using a continuous phylogeographic diffusion model. Analysis of data from five anonymous nuclear loci revealed broadly similar patterns to mtDNA. Secondary admixture was detected between previously isolated refugial populations. In some cases, this is limited to individuals occurring near mitochondrial clade contact zones, but in other cases, more extensive admixture is evident. Overall, our study reveals a complex history of refugial isolation and secondary expansion for puff adders and a mosaic of isolated refugia in southern Africa. We also identify key differences between the processes that drove isolation in B. arietans and those hypothesized for sympatric savannah mammals.
Keywords:Africa  phylogeography  Pleistocene  reptiles  species distribution modelling
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