Published 2016
| Version v1
Journal article
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Reassessment of the evolutionary relationships within the dog-faced bats, genus Cynomops (Chiroptera: Molossidae)
Description
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The low representativeness of the dog‐faced bats (genus
Cynomops
Thomas,
) in collections has constrained the study of the diversity and the evolutionary relationships within this genus. Taxonomic revisions of some taxa, in particular the large‐sized
Cynomops abrasus
(Temminck,
), are crucial for understanding the phylogeny of
Cynomops
. A total of four subspecies of
C. abrasus
have been described to date, all widespread in South America:
C. a. mastivus
(Thomas,
),
C. a. brachymeles
(Peters, 1865),
C. a. cerastes
(Thomas,
) and
C. a. abrasus
(Temminck,
). Here, we evaluated the phylogenetic relationships within
Cynomops
, and the status of the four
C. abrasus
subspecies using complete sequences of two mitochondrial genes (Cyt
b
and
COI
) and 39 morphological characters. Maximum‐parsimony, maximum‐likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic reconstructions recovered a novel hypothesis for
Cynomops
, supported the recognition of
C. a. mastivus
as a distinct species, separated from
C. abrasus
, and two hypotheses of lineages previously unrecognized for
Cynomops
. The use of mitochondrial genes combined with morphological characters revealed again to be a powerful tool to recover the phylogenetic relationships within
Cynomops
and demonstrated that the genus is more diverse than previously thought.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- hash://md5/bfef2ae5f2594c1a5facd7cd38e22f00
- URN
- urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:5435545:items:ADZX398D
- DOI
- 10.1111/zsc.12169
Biodiversity
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Phylum
- Chordata
- Class
- Mammalia
- Order
- Chiroptera