Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 14 Mar 2011

Morphological Variation among Populations of the Western Slimy Salamander on the Edwards Plateau of Central Texas

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Page Range: 103 – 112
DOI: 10.1643/CH-09-217
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We conducted a morphometric analysis on Western Slimy Salamanders, Plethodon albagula, from each of the five mitochondrially defined groups that occur on the Edwards Plateau of central Texas. Although several groups are similar in body size and/or shape, multivariate analyses do find significant differences among groups, and several groups have clear differences for one or several characters. Thus, for several between-group comparisons, the morphological data are consistent with the mitochondrial data in arguing for cryptic lineages of slimy salamanders on the Edwards Plateau. These results demonstrate that despite the common interpretation of morphological conservatism in plethodontids, detailed morphometric studies can be used in taxonomic and evolutionary investigations of these salamanders. Lastly, male central Texas P. albagula are found to have a larger mean body size than females; this pattern of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is reverse from that observed in nearly all other plethodontids with SSD.

Copyright: 2011 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
<bold>Fig. 1.</bold>
 
Fig. 1.

Range map of Plethodon albagula in central Texas. The dashed line encircles the known range of P. albagula in central Texas. Gray shading depicts the range of each mtDNA group as identified by Baird et al. (2006). Collection localities for specimens examined in the morphological analysis are numbered and also listed in Table 1.


<bold>Fig. 2.</bold>
 
Fig. 2.

Plots of mean ± 1 SD for three head characters (left column) and mean ± 1 SE for three principal components across the five mtDNA-defined groups. Dark lines are the males and the lighter gray lines are females.


<bold>Fig. 3.</bold>
 
Fig. 3.

Plots of PC I versus PC II. The 95% confidence ellipses are shown for females (A) and males (B). The group means (C) are also plotted for both sexes.


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: S. A. Schaefer.

Section of Integrative Biology and Texas Natural Science Center, One University Station C0930, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712.
Present address: Population and Conservation Biology Program, Department of Biology, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas 78666; E-mail: drewdavis@txstate.edu.
Present address: Department of Evolution and Ecology and Center for Population Biology, One Shields Avenue, University of California, Davis, California 95616; E-mail: gbpauly@ucdavis.edu. Send reprint requests to this address.
Received: 25 Nov 2009
Accepted: 20 Oct 2010
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