Article

Mochales-Riaño, G., B. Burriel-Carranza, M. I. Barros, G. Velo-Antón, A. Talavera, L. Spilani, H. Tejero-Cicuéndez, et al. 2024. Hidden in the sand: Phylogenomics unravel an unexpected evolutionary history for the desert-adapted vipers of the genus Cerastes. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 191: 107979. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107979

The desert vipers of the genus Cerastes are a small clade of medically important venomous snakes within the family Viperidae. According to published morphological and molecular studies, the group is comprised by four species: two morphologically similar and phylogenetically sister taxa, the African horned viper (Cerastes cerastes) and the Arabian horned viper (Cerastes gasperettii); a more distantly related species, the Saharan sand viper (Cerastes vipera), and the enigmatic Böhme’s sand viper (Cerastes boehmei), only known from a single specimen in captivity allegedly captured in Central Tunisia. In this study, we sequenced one mitochondrial marker (COI) as well as genome-wide data (ddRAD sequencing) from 28 and 41 samples, respectively, covering the entire distribution range of the genus to explore the population genomics, phylogenomic relationships and introgression patterns within the genus Cerastes. Additionally, and to provide insights into the mode of diversification of the group, we carried out niche overlap analyses considering climatic and habitat variables. Both nuclear phylogenomic reconstructions and population structure analyses have unveiled an unexpected evolutionary history for the genus Cerastes, which sharply contradicts the morphological similarities and previously published mitochondrial approaches. Cerastes cerastes and C. vipera are recovered as sister taxa whilst C. gasperettii is a sister taxon to the clade formed by these two species. We found a relatively high niche overlap (OI > 0.7) in both climatic and habitat variables between C. cerastes and C. vipera, contradicting a potential scenario of sympatric speciation. These results are in line with the introgression found between the northwestern African populations of C. cerastes and C. vipera. Finally, our genomic data confirms the existence of a lineage of C. cerastes in Arabia. All these results highlight the importance of genome-wide data over few genetic markers to study the evolutionary history of species.

Annie Montague Alexander
Annie Montague Alexander

December 29, 1867 – September 10, 1950

United States

Cricetidae

Collected Cricetidae and identified Cyperaceae

Antoine Clot
Antoine Clot

November 07, 1793 – August 28, 1868

France; Ottoman Empire

Accipitridae

Collected Accipitridae

Collected Muridae and identified Scincidae

Eberhard Fraas
Eberhard Fraas

June 26, 1862 – March 06, 1915

German Reich

Lacertidae

Collected Lacertidae

Harry Hoogstraal
Harry Hoogstraal

February 24, 1917 – February 24, 1986

United States

Muridae

Collected Muridae and identified Ixodidae

Collected Colubridae and identified Colubridae

Fernand Lataste
Fernand Lataste

March 25, 1847 – January 06, 1934

France

Muridae

Collected Muridae and identified Lacertidae

Thomas E. Lovejoy
Thomas E. Lovejoy

August 22, 1941 – December 25, 2021

United States

Thamnophilidae

Collected Thamnophilidae

Collected Lacertidae and identified Colubridae

Shai Meiri

Israel

Lacertidae

Collected Lacertidae and identified Gekkonidae

Théodore Monod
Théodore Monod

April 09, 1902 – November 22, 2000

France

Pipidae

Collected Pipidae and identified Pipidae

Eduard Rüppell
Eduard Rüppell

November 20, 1794 – December 10, 1884

Kingdom of Prussia

Asteraceae

Collected Asteraceae and identified Meropidae

Peter Schousboe

August 17, 1766 – February 26, 1832

Kingdom of Denmark

Rhodomelaceae

Collected Rhodomelaceae and identified Rhodomelaceae

Carl Linnaeus
Carl Linnaeus

May 23, 1707 – January 10, 1778

Sweden

Fabaceae

Collected Fabaceae and identified Colubridae