Abstrakt: |
Previously, anilioids (Aniliidae, Anomochilidae, Cylindrophiidae and Uropeltidae) were considered the only extant, non-macrostomatan alethinophidian snakes. Although their monophyly and intrarelationships remained poorly established, their fossoriality, small gape, and inferred phylogenetic position have been important evidence in orthodox scenarios about early snake evolution. Recent molecular studies including aniliids, cylindrophiids and uropeltids indicate anilioid polyphyly, with the latter two families comprising a clade nested within Macrostomata. We carried out the first molecular phylogenetic analysis to include the very poorly known and seemingly rare Anomochilidae. Only partial sequences of 12S and 16S rRNA mitochondrial genes could be amplified from tissue collected from a single dead specimen of Anomochilus leonardi. Amplification failed for nuclear and other mitochondrial genes, and for all the investigated genes for the holotype and paratype of A. leonardi. Analyses recovered a para- or polyphyletic Anilioidea. Anomochilus is recovered as most closely related to Cylindrophis maculatus (rendering Cylindrophiidae possibly paraphyletic). The relatively small amount of available data produces only moderate levels of support, but the stability of taxa and agreement across different analytical methods and with larger analyses of snake phylogeny support the abandonment of Anilioidea as a natural taxon, and the recognition of a higher category for a clade comprising Asian anilioids (Anomochilidae, Cylindrophiidae and Uropeltidae). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |