Abstract
Body colorations have been investigated intensely concerning their
adaptive significance from the ecological and evolutionary perspectives.
Melanism has gathered growing attention thanks to its marked variability
across space, time and taxon and, in ectotherms, it has been
hypothesised to be driven by thermal advantages. Among reptiles, vipers
show conspicuous inter- and intraspecific patterns of variation, making
them excellent models to address evolutionary and adaptive patterns. We
investigated the thermal melanism hypothesis across Viperidae by
performing a phylogenetic comparative approach to assess whether its
occurrence is phylogenetically driven or, alternatively, whether it is
influenced by climate. We found no phylogenetic signal of melanism and
reconstructed the ”non-melanic” form as the ancestral state at the root
of their phylogeny, whereas a climatic effect was found so that melanism
is more frequent in colder environments. With this work we provide, for
the first time and on a large scale, strong support to the TMH in
ectotherms; moreover, we hypothesize that melanism has evolved in
multiple events throughout the diversification of vipers, and that it
has been maintained only when its role as a response to sub-optimal
environments counterbalances and overcomes the trade-off with fitness
decrease due to higher predation risk.