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A phylogeny and revised classification of Squamata, including 4161 species of lizards and snakes

TLDR
A new large-scale phylogeny of squamate reptiles is presented that includes new, resurrected, and modified subfamilies within gymnophthalmid and scincid lizards, and boid, colubrid, and lamprophiid snakes.
Abstract
The extant squamates (>9400 known species of lizards and snakes) are one of the most diverse and conspicuous radiations of terrestrial vertebrates, but no studies have attempted to reconstruct a phylogeny for the group with large-scale taxon sampling. Such an estimate is invaluable for comparative evolutionary studies, and to address their classification. Here, we present the first large-scale phylogenetic estimate for Squamata. The estimated phylogeny contains 4161 species, representing all currently recognized families and subfamilies. The analysis is based on up to 12896 base pairs of sequence data per species (average = 2497 bp) from 12 genes, including seven nuclear loci (BDNF, c-mos, NT3, PDC, R35, RAG-1, and RAG-2), and five mitochondrial genes (12S, 16S, cytochrome b, ND2, and ND4). The tree provides important confirmation for recent estimates of higher-level squamate phylogeny based on molecular data (but with more limited taxon sampling), estimates that are very different from previous morphology-based hypotheses. The tree also includes many relationships that differ from previous molecular estimates and many that differ from traditional taxonomy. We present a new large-scale phylogeny of squamate reptiles that should be a valuable resource for future comparative studies. We also present a revised classification of squamates at the family and subfamily level to bring the taxonomy more in line with the new phylogenetic hypothesis. This classification includes new, resurrected, and modified subfamilies within gymnophthalmid and scincid lizards, and boid, colubrid, and lamprophiid snakes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic detection of key innovations, rate shifts, and diversity-dependence on phylogenetic trees.

TL;DR: A method that can identify arbitrary numbers of time-varying diversification processes on phylogenies without specifying their locations in advance is developed and will greatly facilitate the exploration of macroevolutionary dynamics across large phylogenetic trees, which may have been shaped by heterogeneous mixtures of distinct evolutionary processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Osteology of the Reptiles

J. Graham Kerr
- 01 Apr 1926 - 
TL;DR: The Reptiles of the World, Recent and Fossil as mentioned in this paper is the main part of this general work, so far as it had been completed at the time of the author's death, put into shape and edited at the competent hands of Prof. William King Gregory.
Posted Content

Tree of life reveals clock-like speciation and diversification

TL;DR: This paper synthesized a global timetree of life from 2,274 studies representing 50,632 species and examined the pattern and rate of diversification as well as the timing of speciation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring the mammal tree: Species-level sets of phylogenies for questions in ecology, evolution, and conservation

TL;DR: Credible sets of mammalian phylogenetic history are developed, enabling investigations of long-standing questions in comparative biology, and finding that node ages are broadly concordant among studies, and recent rates of speciation are estimated more accurately in this study than in previous "supertree" approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combining phylogenomic and supermatrix approaches, and a time-calibrated phylogeny for squamate reptiles (lizards and snakes) based on 52 genes and 4162 species.

TL;DR: A time-calibrated phylogeny based on extensive sampling of genes and taxa as a resource for comparative studies in squamate reptiles and answers fundamental questions about this combined approach to estimating phylogenies in species-rich groups.
References
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TL;DR: MUSCLE is a new computer program for creating multiple alignments of protein sequences that includes fast distance estimation using kmer counting, progressive alignment using a new profile function the authors call the log-expectation score, and refinement using tree-dependent restricted partitioning.
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RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models

TL;DR: UNLABELLED RAxML-VI-HPC (randomized axelerated maximum likelihood for high performance computing) is a sequential and parallel program for inference of large phylogenies with maximum likelihood (ML) that has been used to compute ML trees on two of the largest alignments to date.
Journal ArticleDOI

New Algorithms and Methods to Estimate Maximum-Likelihood Phylogenies: Assessing the Performance of PhyML 3.0

TL;DR: A new algorithm to search the tree space with user-defined intensity using subtree pruning and regrafting topological moves and a new test to assess the support of the data for internal branches of a phylogeny are introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bayesian Inference of Species Trees from Multilocus Data

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that both BEST and the new Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo method for the multispecies coalescent have much better estimation accuracy for species tree topology than concatenation, and the method outperforms BEST in divergence time and population size estimation.
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