Vertebrate Zoology (Jan 2022)

A statistical reanalysis of morphological differentiation among island night lizards (Xantusia riversiana) from the California Channel Islands

  • L. Lee Grismer,
  • Kin Onn Chan,
  • Robert E. Lovich,
  • Jesse L. Grismer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/vz.72.e78092
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72
pp. 1 – 27

Abstract

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This study re-analyzes morphometric and meristic data among island night lizards, Xantusia riversiana, from the California Channel Islands of San Clemente, Santa Barbara, and San Nicolas in order to ascertain whether the implementation of different statistical methods can recover different results that could potentially alter biological interpretations. Our results concur with a recent previous study demonstrating that the three island populations differ morphologically from one another and that the San Nicolas Island population is the most divergent. Several important aspects, however, of the previous study depart significantly from those recovered here. Our analyses found sexual dimorphism within each population for both morphometric and meristic characters to be relatively uncommon whereas the previous study found nearly all characters to be sexually dimorphic for all island populations. The previous study also recovered significant differences among the three island populations for all morphometric characters whereas far fewer differences were recovered in the present study. Both studies found few significant inter-island differences among the meristic characters. The discordances between these two studies stem from differences in the a priori treatment of the raw character data and the different downstream statistical analyses and visualization techniques used on those data. This was particularly relevant with the use here of an allometric growth algorithm for size-correcting the morphometric data not used in the previous study and by treating all three populations as independently evolving groups. We did not conduct analyses where data from the San Clemente and Santa Barbara island populations were conflated based on their subspecific designation (X. r. reticulata) and then compared to data from the independently evolving San Nicolas Island population. This imprudent use of taxonomy violates the assumptions of statistical independence. We emphasize that explicit justification for the use of particular statistical analyses should occur in all studies—especially if the results bear on the implementation of effective and efficient resource management programs.