Gallotia

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Gallotia
Tenerife Lizard(Gallotia galloti galloti)male (top) and female
Tenerife Lizard
(Gallotia galloti galloti)
male (top) and female
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Lacertidae
Subfamily: Gallotiinae
Genus: Gallotia
Boulenger, 1916
Species

The genus Gallotia are the lacertids (wall lizards) of the Canary Islands. This genus consists of a group that has been evolving there ever since the first islands emerged from the sea over 20 million years ago. The endemic species and subspecies of this group have a number of characteristics that make them quite special within their family (Lacertidae); their only close relatives are the sandrunner lizards (Psammodromus) of the western Mediterranean region. Gallotia are characteristic for eating significant quantities of plants, and for several lineages having evolved insular gigantism.

[edit] Systematics and biogeography

This genus can be divided into two groups - basal lineages and a western clade - based on mtDNA cytochrome b and 12S rRNA sequence analysis and agreeing with a common pattern of radiation in the Canarian archipelago (Maca-Meyer et al. 2003). Both contain very large and small species.

The basal taxa cannot be resolved in their phylogenetic position to each other and the western clade. Given that G. atlantica is a small and G. stehlini a giant species, and that it is also not known when exactly the later evolved its large size, the ancestral lizards which colonized the central and western islands may have been still small or already large.

As the western clade contains a lineage of small and another one of larger species, size changed drastically at least twice in this genus. Moreover, it is not fully resolved in how far the western islands' giant species are related to each other either, as only limited material of G. auaritae has been available for phylogenetic analyses (Maca-Meyer et al. 2003[1]). Thus, there presently exists no satisfying, parsimonious model for evolution of giant size in this genus. In the western clade alone, giant size may be a plesiomorphy (and lost again in caesaris and galloti), a synapomorphy (and lost again in intermedia), or several autapomorphies (evolving independently in goliath and the simonyi group) in regard to the ancestral lizards which colonized the western Canaries.

In any case, in historic and late prehistoric times the three westernmost islands (La Palma, La Gomera, and El Hierro) and Gran Canaria held one large and one small species. Tenerife, largest of the islands, additionally has the appropriately-named intermedius, whereas before the modern introductions no large species were known to occur on the two easternmost islands (Lanzarote and Fuerteventura). It is well possible however that remains of extinct giant forms will eventually be discovered there too, given that the successful introduction of G. stehlini to Fuerteventura suggests a vacant ecological niche was present there.

Prehistoric remains were assigned to the taxa G. goliath and G. maxima, the former supposedly occurring on several islands, the latter only on Tenerife. It was eventually determined, however, that G. maxima is a junior synonym of G. goliath, and that the latter was very close to G. simonyi; supposed goliath specimens from El Hierro, La Gomera, and La Palma are probably just extremely large individuals of, respectively, G. simonyi, G. bravoana, and G. auaritae (Barahona et al. 2000). However, a mummified giant specimen from Tenerife yielded ancient DNA remains, and by analysis of this, it was concluded that G. goliath is a valid species that probably was restricted to Tenerife, and apparently was closer to G. intermedia than to G. simonyi (Maca-Meyer et al. 2003).

Distribution of small, large, and giant species of Gallotia, going west to east.
Extant, not endangered = blue. Extant, critically endangered = purple. Extinct = red. Introduced = gray.
El Hierro La Palma La Gomera Tenerife Gran Canaria Fuerteventura Lanzarote
Small G. caesaris G. galloti G. caesaris G. galloti G. atlantica G. atlantica G. atlantica
Large G. intermedia
Giant G. simonyi G. auaritae G. bravoana G. goliath G. stehlini G. stehlini

Note: G. auaritae was rediscovered in 2007, but remains classified as extinct until the Red List is updated.

Basal group

Western clade
Large species

Small species

  • Gallotia caesaris - Boettger's Lizard
    • Gallotia caesaris caesaris
    • Gallotia caesaris gomerae
  • Gallotia galloti - Tenerife Lizard or Western Canaries Lizard
    • Gallotia galloti eisentrauti
    • Gallotia galloti galloti
    • Gallotia galloti insulanagae
    • Gallotia galloti palmae

[edit] References

  • Barahona, F.; Evans, S. E.; Mateo, J.A.; García-Márquez, M. & López-Jurado, L.F. (2000): Endemism, gigantism and extinction in island lizards: the genus Gallotia on the Canary Islands. J. Zool. 250(3): 373-388. doi:10.1017/S0952836900003101 (HTML abstract)
  • Maca-Meyer, N.; Carranza, S.; Rando, J.C.; Arnold, E.N. & Cabrera, V.M. (2003): Status and relationships of the extinct giant Canary Island lizard Gallotia goliath (Reptilia: Lacertidae), assessed using ancient mtDNA from its mummified remains. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 80(4): 659–670. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2003.00265.x (HTML abstract)

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ See p.665. The presumption of a fixed-speed molecular clock (p.667) - which furthermore implies lack of genetic drift - is unrealistic.