Taxonomic Swap 59157 (Guardado el 19/11/2019)

Derived from the sourced literature on The Reptile Database: Burbrink and Guiher (2014), Considering gene flow when using coalescent methods to delimit lineages of North American pitvipers of the genus Agkistrodon. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 173: 505-526. doi:10.1111/zoj.12211 (http://cnah.org/pdf/88290.pdf).

See related flags:
https://www.inaturalist.org/flags/251295
https://www.inaturalist.org/flags/383267

desconocido | Agkistrodon piscivorus swing-split
Añadido por bouteloua en 27 de junio de 2019 a las 10:10 PM | Resuelto por loarie en 19 de noviembre de 2019
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Comentarios

Nooooo!! Reptile Database has fallen.

Anotado por bennypoo hace mas de 4 años

Both splits that were proposed by Guiher et al are not really usable in the real world. A. controtrix has been split into two species WITH large amounts of gene flow. This gene flow is shown in a figure in their paper to encompass a swath of between 50 and 200 miles from the coast of Texas, north into Kansas. So all of the snakes that fall into that hybrid zone are not definable to species. If this paper is going to be used then please make an A. contortrix "complex" taxon so that the hybrids can be placed into copperheads instead of being relegated to only generic level ID. The same goes for A. piscivorus in the south east with an even wider area of "hybridization" between the two species.

Anotado por toby hace mas de 4 años

see existing discussion at https://www.inaturalist.org/flags/383267

Anotado por bouteloua hace mas de 4 años

Thanks bouteloua. I was wondering where all the hubbub might be happening. Best of luck with this one.

Anotado por bennypoo hace mas de 4 años

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