TL;DR: The Western Lyresnake (Trimorphodon biscutatus) is a widespread, polytypic taxon inhabiting arid regions from the warm deserts of the southwestern United States southward along the Pacific versant of Mexico to tropical deciduous forests of Mesoamerica.
Abstract: The Western Lyresnake ( Trimorphodon biscutatus ) is a widespread, polytypic taxon inhabiting arid regions from the warm deserts of the southwestern United States southward along the Pacific versant of Mexico to the tropical deciduous forests of Mesoamerica. This broadly distributed species provides a unique opportunity to evaluate a priori biogeographical hypotheses spanning two major distinct biogeographical realms (the Nearctic and Neotropical) that are usually treated separately in phylogeographical analyses. I investigated the phylogeography of T. biscutatus using maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from across this species’ range. Phylogenetic analyses recovered five well-supported clades whose boundaries are concordant with existing geographical barriers, a pattern consistent with a model of vicariant allopatric divergence. Assuming a vicariance model, divergence times between mitochondrial lineages were estimated using Bayesian relaxed molecular clock methods calibrated using geological information from putative vicariant events. Divergence time point estimates were bounded by broad confidence intervals, and thus these highly conservative estimates should be considered tentative hypotheses at best. Comparison of mtDNA lineages and taxa traditionally recognized as subspecies based on morphology suggest this taxon is comprised of multiple independent lineages at various stages of divergence, ranging from putative secondary contact and hybridization to sympatry of ‘subspecies’.
TL;DR: Ten genera of colubrids in the United States are discussed—Coniophanes, Hypsiglena, Leptodeira, Oxybelis, Trimorphodon, Diadophis, Heterodon, Rhadinaea, Tantilla, and Thamnophis.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that T. quadruplex venom proteins are similar to those found in front-fanged snake species are present but show different biological activities, underscore the importance of considering the biological roles of venoms from more than a mammal-centric perspective.