Artigo Revisado por pares

Head shape variation in eastern and western Montpellier snakes

2014; Firenze University Press; Volume: 9; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.13128/acta_herpetol-14194

ISSN

1827-9643

Autores

Marco Mangiacotti, Laura Limongi, Marco Sannolo, Roberto Sacchi, Marco A. L. Zuffi, Stefano Scali,

Tópico(s)

Wildlife Ecology and Conservation

Resumo

The Montpellier snake Malpolon monspessulanus is a wide-ranging species that inhabits Western and Eastern Europe, North Africa and Middle East. Four clades have been recognised as two species, M. insignitus and M. monspessulanus , each with two subspecies. Clades have been substantially identified on the basis of molecular data, pholidosis and colouration, while morphometric traits have been ignored. We compared head shape of 54 specimens belonging to three out of the four clades ( M. insignitus insignitus , M. i. fuscus , and M. monspessulanus monspessulanus ) by means of geometric morphometrics. We found a significant differentiation: the supraocular and frontal area showed the largest amount of variation, being respectively much thinner in M. i. insignitus , a bit less thin in M. i. fuscus and definitely wider in M. m. monspessulanus . Our findings are fully in agreement with the genetic studies and phylogeny explains more than 20% of the observed variation, supporting the taxonomic distinction inside the genus Malpolon . The functional and/or adaptive meaning of the observed differences is not clear, but it seems unlikely that it may be related to diet. Combining morphological data with phylogeography and environmental features, we formulated an explanatory hypothesis that allowed a precise and testable prediction.

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