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Reproductive isolation between oviparous and viviparous lineages of the Eurasian common lizard Zootoca vivipara in a contact zone
Authors:Luca Cornetti  Francesco Belluardo  Samuele Ghielmi  Giovanni Giovine  Gentile F Ficetola  Giorgio Bertorelle  Heidi C Hauffe
Institution:1. Department of Biodiversity and Molecular Ecology, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all'Adige, Trento, Italy;2. Dipartimento di Scienze della Vita e Biotecnologie, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy;3. Dipartimento di Bioscienze, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;4. Museo Insubrico di Storia Naturale di Clivio e Induno Olona, Clivio, Varese, Italy;5. Stazione sperimentale regionale per lo studio e la conservazione degli anfibi in Lombardia – Lago di Endine, Lovere, Bergamo, Italy;6. Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Ambiente e del Territorio e di Scienze della Terra, University of Milano‐Bicocca, Milan, Italy;7. Laboratoire d'Ecologie Alpine (LECA), Université Grenoble‐Alpes, Grenoble, Cedex 9, France
Abstract:Contact zones between two evolutionary lineages are often useful for understanding the process of speciation because the observed genetic pattern reflects the history of differentiation. The Eurasian lacertid lizard Zootoca vivipara is a potentially interesting model for studying the role of reproductive mode in the speciation of squamate reptiles because it has both oviparous (Zootoca vivipara carniolica) and viviparous (Zootoca vivipara vivipara) populations that have recently been shown to be genetically distinct. We studied a newly‐discovered syntopic area of these two Zootoca subspecies in the central Italian Alps using genetic markers to investigate the level of introgression between them. Patterns of genetic differentiation in a fragment of the mitochondrial DNA cytb gene and a set of nuclear microsatellites show that the speciation process is complete in this area, with no evidence of recent introgression. Phylogenetic and genotypic divergence suggests that the two subspecies have experienced long independent evolutionary histories, during which genetic and phenotypic differences evolved. The possible roles of biogeography, reproductive mode, and cytogenetic differentiation in this speciation process are discussed. © 2015 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2015, 114 , 566–573.
Keywords:gene flow  hybridization  microsatellites  speciation
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