Authors
John J Wiens, Carl R Hutter, Daniel G Mulcahy, Brice P Noonan, Ted M Townsend, Jack W Sites Jr, Tod W Reeder
Publication date
2012/12/23
Journal
Biology Letters
Volume
8
Issue
6
Pages
1043-1046
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Squamate reptiles (lizards and snakes) are one of the most diverse groups of terrestrial vertebrates. Recent molecular analyses have suggested a very different squamate phylogeny relative to morphological hypotheses, but many aspects remain uncertain from molecular data. Here, we analyse higher-level squamate phylogeny with a molecular dataset of unprecedented size, including 161 squamate species for up to 44 nuclear genes each (33 717 base pairs), using both concatenated and species-tree methods for the first time. Our results strongly resolve most squamate relationships and reveal some surprising results. In contrast to most other recent studies, we find that dibamids and gekkotans are together the sister group to all other squamates. Remarkably, we find that the distinctive scolecophidians (blind snakes) are paraphyletic with respect to other snakes, suggesting that snakes were primitively burrowers …
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