TY - JOUR T1 - Have coral snake mimics diversified more than non-mimics? JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/042440 SP - 042440 AU - Daniel S. Caetano AU - Laura R. V. Alencar AU - Paulo Passos AU - Felipe G. Grazziotin AU - Hussam Zaher AU - Marcio Martins Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/03/05/042440.abstract N2 - Dipsadidae is the most diversified family of snakes, composed of species showing an impressive variety of color patterns. Some species are cryptic whereas others have contrasting patterns comprised by bright colors alternated with darker shades, including particular combinations of vivid colors characteristic of coral snakes (Elapidae). Species with such patterns are thought to be mimics of coral snakes based on their color pattern similarity, predator avoidance of such patterns in field experiments, and the geographical concordance between models and mimics. Here we test whether color patterns associated with coral snake mimicry and contrasting color patterns in general influenced the diversification dynamics of the group. We compile the largest database of color patterns among reptiles to date, with color descriptions for the majority (594 species) of dipsadids. We used trait-dependent diversification models along with extensive simulations to deal with the recently described statistical bias associated with such methods. Despite the apparent survival advantage associated with coral snake mimicry, we show that there is no detectable influence of color types in the dynamics of diversification in Dipsadidae. We discuss insights into the function of color patterns and argue that non-mimic contrasting patterns might serve as pre-adaptations to mimicry of coral snakes.Data archival location BEAST XML file and BiSSE MCMC results: http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.831493R code for analyses and simulations: https://github.com/Caetanods/Dipsadidae_color_evolution ER -