Authors
Adalgisa Caccone, James P Gibbs, Valerio Ketmaier, Elizabeth Suatoni, Jeffrey R Powell
Publication date
1999/11/9
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
96
Issue
23
Pages
13223-13228
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences
Description
Perhaps the most enduring debate in reptile systematics has involved the giant Galápagos tortoises (Geochelone nigra), whose origins and systematic relationships captivated Charles Darwin and remain unresolved to this day. Here we report a phylogenetic reconstruction based on mitochondrial DNA sequences from Galápagos tortoises and Geochelone from mainland South America and Africa. The closest living relative to the Galápagos tortoise is not among the larger-bodied tortoises of South America but is the relatively small-bodied Geochelone chilensis, or Chaco tortoise. The split between G. chilensis and the Galápagos lineage probably occurred 6 to 12 million years ago, before the origin of the oldest extant Galápagos island. Our data suggest that the four named southern subspecies on the largest island, Isabela, are not distinct genetic units, whereas a genetically distinct northernmost Isabela …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Caccone, JP Gibbs, V Ketmaier, E Suatoni… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999