The state of Florida has the world's highest diversity of established nonnative reptiles, including snakes, lizards, turtles, and crocodilians, most of them introduced from the pet trade. The Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus) is the only nonnative crocodilian established in Florida, with the earliest date of introduction in 1950. Despite its likely origin being Colombia, the taxonomic identity of the subspecies occurring in Florida remains unknown. We report the first study that resolves the taxonomic status of the population of Ca. crocodilus in Florida based on molecular analysis of samples collected from the 1970s to 2013. We also investigate the probable origin of this population as well as the specimens of the Dwarf Caimans, Paleosuchus palpebrosus and Paleosuchus trigonatus, which have been collected in Florida. We identified only one lineage of Ca. crocodilus in Florida, corresponding to Caiman crocodilus fuscus, and our results indicate the Magdalena River basin in Colombia as the most likely area of origin. We also correct the identification of Paleosuchus recorded in Florida and identify the Guiana Shield, and specifically Guyana, as the most likely region from which these specimens were introduced.
Florida harbors the highest diversity of established nonindigenous reptile species in the world, with three turtles, 50 lizards, five snakes, and one crocodilian, most of which arrived through the commercial pet trade (Krysko et al., 2011, 2019). Over the last few decades, an increasing number of exotic crocodilian species has been registered in Florida, including Caiman crocodilus, Crocodylus niloticus, Paleosuchus palpebrosus, Paleosuchus trigonatus, and Mecistops cataphractus (Krysko et al., 2011; Rochford et al., 2016). However, only Ca. crocodilus is established in Florida (Ellis, 1980; Krysko et al., 2019). Additional cryptic species might have also been introduced, but their identification is often obfuscated by the lack of diagnostic morphological features. Identification of crocodilian taxa, especially closely related species or subspecies, has often been difficult because of similarities in external morphology and the lack of diagnostic characters distinguishing some taxa (Medem, 1983; Busack and Pandya, 2011).
In studies of exotic species, genetic tools have proven effective for identifying lineages and/or cryptic species and their geographic origin (Armstrong and Ball, 2005; Le Roux and Wieczorek, 2008; Frankham et al., 2010; Fedler et al., 2016; Cock et al., 2017; Harris et al., 2017). Recent molecular phylogenetic studies have revealed substantial cryptic lineage diversity within Crocodylia, some of which have been or will likely be recognized as distinct species within Caiman (Roberto et al., 2020), Osteolaemus, Mecistops (Shirley et al., 2014), Crocodylus (Hekkala et al., 2011), and Paleosuschus (Muniz et al., 2018; Bittencourt et al., 2019). Rochford et al. (2016) also employed similar tools to identify introduced individuals of Crocodylus in southern Florida as Cr. niloticus, most likely of South African origins, while previous to this study it was thought the introduced species was the morphologically similar Crocodylus suchus.
The only species of crocodilian established in Florida is Ca. crocodilus. The Caiman crocodilus/yacare species complex currently comprises Ca. yacare and three subspecies of Ca. crocodilus: Caiman crocodilus crocodilus, Caiman crocodilus chiapasius, and Caiman crocodilus fuscus (Balaguera-Reina et al., 2020). Molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed substantial lineage diversity within this species complex (Venegas-Anaya et al., 2008; Roberto et al., 2020). Members of this complex can be difficult to distinguish using only external morphology (i.e., coloration and scalation; Busack and Pandya, 2011), which can lead to misidentification of some subspecies in both their native and introduced ranges.
The Florida population of Ca. crocodilus is suspected to have been introduced from Colombia via the pet trade in the 1950s (King and Krakauer, 1966). Despite the suspected origin, the identity of these Florida caiman within the Ca. crocodilus complex remains unclear. Some authors have attributed the Florida caiman to Ca. c. crocodilus (Velasco and Ayarzaguena, 2010), while others have attributed them to Ca. c. fuscus (Rochford et al., 2019), though in both cases without reference to specific evidence. To date, there have been no genetic analyses to verify the identity of the Caiman established in Florida. However, Roberto et al. (2020) found three distinct mitochondrial lineages of Ca. crocodilus in Colombia. Two lineages, one in the Orinoco and other in the Amazon drainages, are lineages of Ca. c. crocodilus, whereas the third lineage is Ca. c. fuscus found in the Magdalena River basin and along the Caribbean Coast. Based on the current understanding of the distribution of lineages in Colombia, it is possible that the Florida populations of Ca. crocodilus could contain any or all of these three lineages.
Two other alligatorid species have also been reported as introduced in the Everglades of southern Florida. However, there is no evidence that these two species, the Dwarf Caimans P. palpebrosus and P. trigonatus, are established (Krysko et al., 2011). The geographic origin of these individuals that were introduced via the pet trade also has yet to be explored.
Using phylogenetic analysis of the mitochondrial Cytochrome b (Cytb) gene, we evaluated the likely geographic origin of the Florida Caiman population and the two captured Paleosuchus specimens. We aimed to understand whether the Ca. crocodilus population that is established in Florida comprises one or more distinct lineages of Ca. crocodilus and to determine the geographic origin of the source populations. Similarly, we aimed to determine the taxonomic identity and likely origin of the Paleosuchus found in Florida.
Materials and Methods
Tissue samples from introduced Caiman crocodilus and Paleosuchus in Florida were obtained from the Division of Herpetology at the Florida Museum of Natural History (FLMNH; Table 1). Tissues used included muscle and scute samples preserved in 95% ethanol and stored frozen in the FLMNH Genetic Resource Repository as well as dried skin removed from skulls stored in the herpetology collection. Genomic DNA was extracted from tissues using the Qiagen DNeasy Blood & Tissue Kit (Qiagen). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) mixes contained 9.5 µL H2O, 12.5 µL GoTaq® Master Mix (Promega Corp, Madison, Wisconsin, USA), 1.0 µL each primer (10 µM), and 1.0 µL genomic DNA template. We amplified the mitochondrial region Cytb using two external primers, GluCRf.1 (5′-CAACCAAAACCTGAGGYCTGA-3′) and ProCRr.1 (5′-ATTAGAAYGTCGGCTTTGGGG-3′), one internal primer CytbCRr.2 (5′-AAGATYAGGTGGGTKATGAG-3′), which is paired with GluCRf.1, and sequencing primers CytbCRf.1 (5′-ATGACCCACCAACTACGAAAA-3′) and CytbCRf.3 (5′-CCATACATYGGAGACACCAT-3′; Hrbek et al., 2008). Primer CytbCRf3 can also be paired with ProCRr.1 to amplify the second half of the Cytb if needed. PCRs were carried out by denaturing at 95°C for 5 min followed by 35 cycles of amplification, denaturing at 95°C for 30 sec, annealing at 52°C for 30 sec, and extension at 72°C for 60 sec followed by a final extension at 72°C for 5 min. Four microliters of each PCR product were electrophoresed on a 2% agarose gel and visualized with GelRed™ stain (Biotium Inc., Hayward, California, USA). PCR products with a distinct band were sent to Genewiz, Inc. (South Plainfield, New Jersey, USA) for sequencing. Sequence files were assembled and verified in Geneious 9.1.8 ( https://www.geneious.com; Kearse et al., 2012). These newly collected data were deposited in GenBank (MW660822–MW660831).
Table 1.
Caiman crocodilus fuscus sequences sampled in Florida.
We added our eight samples of Florida Ca. crocodilus and two samples of Florida Paleosuchus to the Cytb dataset of Roberto et al. (2020), which is the most comprehensive survey of genetic diversity in these taxa to date. It includes all members of the Ca. crocodilus/yacare complex as well as Caimon latirostris, Melanosuchus niger, P. palpebrosus, and P. trigonatus lineages that have been previously delimited, including sampling from throughout the ranges of these species. Our final dataset included 296 haplotypes in the subfamily Caimaninae: 54 of M. niger, 22 P. palpebrosus, 37 P. trigonatus, 21 Ca. latirostris, 83 Ca. c. crocodilus, 52 Ca. c. fuscus, 3 Ca. c. chiapasius, and 23 Ca. yacare. We aligned the sequences in Geneious using MUSCLE (Edgar, 2004) and jModelTest (Posada, 2008), which determined the best nucleotide substitution model based to be TIM3+G. We used BEAST 2.5.1 (Bouckaert et al., 2014) to estimate the phylogenetic relationships using Bayesian Inference with an uncorrelated lognormal relaxed clock and a coalescent constant population size. We ran three independent Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) runs for 50 million generations sampling every 5,000 generations. We checked the parameters on TRACER to ensure all ESS values were at least 200. We combined all runs with logcombiner and generated the maximum clade credibility tree (MCCT) using TreeAnnotator (Bouckaert et al., 2014). All analyses were done on the CIPRES gateway (Miller et al., 2010; https://www.phylo.org).
Results
Resulting sequences of Cytb of Caiman crocodilus from Florida ranged from 520 to 1,150 base pairs (bp; Table 1) and represented the same haplotype. All individuals from Florida were the Ca. c. fuscus lineage (Figs. 1A, 2), a clade with individuals from Costa Rica through Panama to the northern Caribbean coast and Magdalena River basin of Colombia. The individuals from the established Florida population are most similar to the individuals of the Caribbean coast of Colombia in the Bolivar Department.
Sequences of individuals of P. palpebrosus and P. trigonatus from Florida were 1,090 bp. The P. palpebrosus collected in Florida (UF-Herp-175564) is from a clade of P. palpebrosus from the Brazilian Amazon, similar to the haplotypes of Guiana Shield in the Roraima state (Figs. 1B, 3). The P. trigonatus from Florida (UF-Herp-153469) also falls within a clade from the Guiana Shield.
Discussion
The taxonomic status of the Florida Ca. crocodilus has been uncertain. Smith and Kohler (1977) considered the subspecies identity of Ca. crocodilus in Florida as undefined. Previously King and Krakauer (1966) considered the Florida Caiman only as the “spectacled caiman,” the common name applied to all subspecies of Ca. crocodilus. Wilson and Porras (1983) considered this to be the “Brown Caiman,” the common name of Ca. c. fuscus. Velasco and Ayarzaguena (2010) classified this population as Ca. c. crocodilus, while the last International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) assessment (Balaguera-Reina and Velasco, 2019) only considered the Florida individuals as Ca. crocodilus, without considering the subspecies. Rochford et al. (2019) asserted that Ca. c. fuscus occurs in Florida, but provided no information on how they identified the Florida specimens to subspecies, as was also the case in other previous works (e.g., King and Krakauer, 1966; Smith and Kohler, 1977; Wilson and Porras, 1983; Velasco and Ayarzaguena, 2010). Using a molecular phylogenetic approach, our work clarifies, for the first time, the taxonomic status of the Florida Caiman, providing evidence that they are Ca. c. fuscus. Our results also corroborate that these populations originated from individuals that were likely collected from the Magdalena River and nearby coastal Colombia. Further, we found no evidence of more than one lineage of Ca. crocodilus in south Florida.
Our samples of Ca. crocodilus from Florida included individuals collected between 1979 and 2013. All individuals had the same haplotype as the Brown Caiman, Ca. c. fuscus, representing a single geographically circumscribed lineage occurring in the Caribbean coastal area of Colombia. The specimen UF-Herp-45439, collected in 1979, yielded only a short fragment of Cytb (520 bp) that was identical to the corresponding region of several haplotypes from the Colombian, Panamanian, and Costa Rican Ca. c. fuscus. This similarity resulted in this specimen being placed in an unsupported clade with other Ca. c. fuscus from northern Colombia, Panama, and Costa Rica rather than with the same clade as the Florida specimens, from which we obtained full sequences. Despite the uncertainty in placement of UF-Herp-45439, we believe this specimen shares the same origin as the more recently collected specimens.
The first report of Ca. crocodilus in Florida is from 1950 (King and Krakauer, 1966) and is believed to have resulted from the release of individuals from Colombia brought into the United States via the pet trade. However, established populations of Ca. crocodilus were not reported in Florida until the late 1970s, based on evidence of nesting, more individuals of different size classes, and high rates of encounter in south Florida (Ellis, 1980). These established populations were inferred by Ellis (1980) to derive from populations in Colombia because of importation records, indicating that during the 1970s nearly 250,000 live Ca. crocodilus were imported to the United States from Colombia (Busack, 1974). Medem (1971) reported that Barranquilla, at the mouth of the Magdalena River, was one of the principal export centers in Colombia for this species and, based on the distribution of Ca. c. fuscus, we can infer that the likely origin of the Florida population was from this river basin.
The records of P. palpebrosus and P. trigonatus from Florida also deserve clarification. The identification reported by Krysko et al. (2011) is incorrect. The specimen UF-Herp-153469 identified as P. trigonatus is actually P. palpebrosus, whereas UF-Herp-175564 (the same as photographic voucher UF-Herp-165484) is P. trigonatus but was originally identified as P. palpebrosus. Our phylogenetic analyses of P. palpebrosus from Florida indicated it to be a member of the Amazon clade (Muniz et al., 2018), closely related to the Guiana Shield population. Our analyses also indicated that the P. trigonatus sample belongs to the Guiana+ coastal clade of Bittencourt et al. (2019). In both cases, the individuals of Paleosuchus from Florida are in clades found on the Guiana Shield of northeastern South America. Not surprisingly, Guyana is one of the major sources of Paleosuchus for the United States pet trade, with approximately 430 individuals being exported every year (Sinovas et al., 2017).
Molecular genetics remain an important tool for identifying and managing populations of crocodilians exploited for the pet trade. Caiman crocodilus is the most traded live crocodilian species exported to the United States. Between 1996 and 2010, 805,000 individuals were imported, a number that continues to rise and represents approximately 2.3% of the total reptile species individuals imported to the United States (Robinson et al., 2015). It is possible that different lineages of Ca. crocodilus are entering the United States, although our analyses provide evidence for only one lineage in Florida. However, new molecular analyses such as quadruplex PCR assays and multiplex real-time PCR protocols have proven to be cost effective for identifying commercially traded species (Magnussen et al., 2007; Cardeñosa et al., 2018) and could be used to track and identify endangered or overexploited crocodilian taxa in the international trade. Quadruplex PCR assays and multiplex real-time PCR protocols could be particularly useful for deducing centers of geographic origin and lineage diversity within the morphologically similar members of crocodilian species complexes.
Acknowledgments.
Our work was supported through a CAPES doctoral fellowship (88882.156872/2016-01), CNPq fellowship (SWE 22/2018), and Student Research Assistance grant from the IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group to IJR. We thank B. Marioni for the photo of Paleosuchus palpebrosus and S. M. Hernadez-Rangel for the photo of Caiman crocodilus fuscus, and C. Sheehy and T. Lott for all the support accessing the UF herpetology and genetic collections.