Ecology, conservation status, and phylogenetic placement of endemic Pristimantis frogs (Anura: Craugastoridae) in Trinidad and Tobago and genetic affinities to northern Venezuela

  • Michael J. Jowers
  • , Santiago Sánchez-Ramírez
  • , Mark S. Greener
  • , Lynsey R. Harper
  • , Renoir J. Auguste
  • , Trudie Marshall
  • , Robyn Thomson
  • , Isabel Byrne
  • , Ciara F. Loughrey
  • , Leah Graham
  • , William A. O. McGhee
  • , John C. Murphy
  • , Gilson A. Rivas
  • , Cammy Beyts
  • , J. Roger Downie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Trinidad and Tobago are home to three endemic species in the anuran genus Pristimantis, of which two (Pristimantis charlottevillensis and Pristimantis turpinorum) occur in Tobago alone and the third (Pristimantis urichi) is present on both islands. Earlier, the IUCN assessed the conservation status of these species as: P. urichi, Endangered (EN); P. charlottevillensis, Least Concern (LC); P. turpinorum, Vulnerable (VU). However, these assessments were based on very little field-based evidence. Here, we present survey results which contributed to reassessments as LC, VU and Data Deficient for these three species, respectively. Despite the close proximity of Trinidad to northern Venezuela, the islands do not share any Pristimantis species with the mainland, which holds a rich endemicity of Pristimantis regionally. In this study, we used genetic sequencing from several island populations and compared them to northern Venezuelan endemics to assess genetic divergence for the first time. The time tree analyses found that only the northern Tobago species P. turpinorum is closely related to mainland Pristimantis, with a genetic split dating to the Late Miocene, suggesting a vicariant event of mainland and island species. Pristimantis urichi, although identical between the two islands, remains highly divergent from the mainland species. Similar results were found for P. charlottevillensis. In addition, there was a high level of divergence between P. urichi and P. charlottevillensis. These findings indicate different island colonization events by different lineages. Sequencing other Venezuelan species remains pivotal to unravel the complexity of the colonization episodes in the region, likely influenced by the changing topography and multiple connection and isolation episodes of the islands by eustatic sea-level changes.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)136-149
JournalPopulation Ecology
Volume64
Issue number2
Early online date27 Dec 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022
Externally publishedYes

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