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Dive into the research topics where Shelley Edwards is active.

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Featured researches published by Shelley Edwards.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Convergent Evolution Associated with Habitat Decouples Phenotype from Phylogeny in a Clade of Lizards

Shelley Edwards; Bieke Vanhooydonck; Anthony Herrel; G. John Measey; Krystal A. Tolley

Convergent evolution can explain similarity in morphology between species, due to selection on a fitness-enhancing phenotype in response to local environmental conditions. As selective pressures on body morphology may be strong, these have confounded our understanding of the evolutionary relationships between species. Within the speciose African radiation of lacertid lizards (Eremiadini), some species occupy a narrow habitat range (e.g. open habitat, cluttered habitat, strictly rupicolous, or strictly psammophilic), which may exert strong selective pressures on lizard body morphology. Here we show that the overall body plan is unrelated to shared ancestry in the African radiation of Eremiadini, but is instead coupled to habitat use. Comprehensive Bayesian and likelihood phylogenies using multiple representatives from all genera (2 nuclear, 2 mitochondrial markers) show that morphologically convergent species thought to represent sister taxa within the same genus are distantly related evolutionary lineages (Ichnotropis squamulosa and Ichnotropis spp.; Australolacerta rupicola and A. australis). Hierarchical clustering and multivariate analysis of morphological characters suggest that body, and head, width and height (stockiness), all of which are ecologically relevant with respect to movement through habitat, are similar between the genetically distant species. Our data show that convergence in morphology, due to adaptation to similar environments, has confounded the assignment of species leading to misidentification of the taxonomic position of I. squamulosa and the Australolacerta species.


PeerJ | 2015

Frog eat frog: exploring variables influencing anurophagy

G. John Measey; Giovanni Vimercati; F. André de Villiers; Mohlamatsane M. Mokhatla; Sarah J. Davies; Shelley Edwards; Res Altwegg

Background. Frogs are generalist predators of a wide range of typically small prey items. But descriptions of dietary items regularly include other anurans, such that frogs are considered to be among the most important of anuran predators. However, the only existing hypothesis for the inclusion of anurans in the diet of post-metamorphic frogs postulates that it happens more often in bigger frogs. Moreover, this hypothesis has yet to be tested. Methods. We reviewed the literature on frog diet in order to test the size hypothesis and determine whether there are other putative explanations for anurans in the diet of post-metamorphic frogs. In addition to size, we recorded the habitat, the number of other sympatric anuran species, and whether or not the population was invasive. We controlled for taxonomic bias by including the superfamily in our analysis. Results. Around one fifth of the 355 records included anurans as dietary items of populations studied, suggesting that frogs eating anurans is not unusual. Our data showed a clear taxonomic bias with ranids and pipids having a higher proportion of anuran prey than other superfamilies. Accounting for this taxonomic bias, we found that size in addition to being invasive, local anuran diversity, and habitat produced a model that best fitted our data. Large invasive frogs that live in forests with high anuran diversity are most likely to have a higher proportion of anurans in their diet. Conclusions. We confirm the validity of the size hypothesis for anurophagy, but show that there are additional significant variables. The circumstances under which frogs eat frogs are likely to be complex, but our data may help to alert conservationists to the possible dangers of invading frogs entering areas with threatened anuran species.


African Journal of Herpetology | 2016

Analysis of genetic diversity in Rose’s mountain toadlet (Capensibufo rosei) using novel microsatellite markers

Jessica M. da Silva; Kevin A. Feldheim; Ryan J. Daniels; Shelley Edwards; Krystal A. Tolley

Abstract On the Cape Peninsula, Capensibufo rosei is known from only two isolated breeding populations within Table Mountain National Park. Because of its declining state, there is an urgent need to understand the genetic diversity, population structure and patterns of movement of this species. To do this, 15 microsatellite primer pairs were designed, optimised and tested. Successful loci were screened for null alleles and genotyping errors and then analysed, specifically noting the number of alleles, allelic size range, observed and expected heterozygosities, deviations from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) and linkage disequilibria. Bottleneck tests and analyses of molecular variance (AMOVA) were also conducted to gain insight into each population’s structure. Eleven primer pairs produced unambiguous polymerase chain reactions (PCR) products and scoreable bands, which were found to be polymorphic across both breeding populations. Deviations from HWE were detected owing to the presence of null alleles and inbreeding. Significant bottleneck signatures were detected for both populations and the AMOVA revealed significant differentiation between the two populations, indicating genetic structure at the population level.


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2015

Chemical signalling in lizards: an interspecific comparison of femoral pore numbers in Lacertidae

Simon Baeckens; Shelley Edwards; Katleen Huyghe; Raoul Van Damme


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2013

Is dietary niche breadth linked to morphology and performance in Sandveld lizards Nucras (Sauria: Lacertidae)?

Shelley Edwards; Krystal A. Tolley; Bieke Vanhooydonck; G. John Measey; Anthony Herrel


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2015

The effects of substratum on locomotor performance in lacertid lizards

Bieke Vanhooydonck; John Measey; Shelley Edwards; Buyisile G. Makhubo; Krystal A. Tolley; Anthony Herrel


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2011

Evolutionary history of the Karoo bush rat, Myotomys unisulcatus (Rodentia: Muridae): Disconcordance between morphology and genetics

Shelley Edwards; Julien Claude; Bettine Jansen van Vuuren; Conrad A. Matthee


Zootaxa | 2013

A molecular phylogeny of the African plated lizards, genus gerrhosaurus wiegmann, 1828 (squamata: Gerrhosauridae ), with the description of two new genera

Michael F. Bates; Krystal A. Tolley; Shelley Edwards; Zoë Davids; Jessica M. da Silva; William R. Branch


Zootaxa | 2013

Taxonomic adjustments in the systematics of the southern African lacertid lizards (Sauria: Lacertidae)

Shelley Edwards; William R. Branch; Bieke Vanhooydonck; Anthony Herrel; G. John Measey; Krystal A. Tolley


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2016

Diving in head first: trade‐offs between phenotypic traits and sand‐diving predator escape strategy in Meroles desert lizards

Shelley Edwards; Anthony Herrel; Bieke Vanhooydonck; G. John Measey; Krystal A. Tolley

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Anthony Herrel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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William R. Branch

Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University

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