“…This is especially true in tropical regions such as Southeast Asia, the dynamic and complex environmental history of which (Hall, , , , ; Woodruff, , ; Bird, Taylor & Hunt, ; Outlaw & Volker, ; Reddy, ; Cannon, Morley & Bush, ; Cannon, ; Gower et al ., ; Morley, ; Richardson, Costion & Muellner, ) has contributed greatly to the phylogenetic and phylogeographic structuring of a number of wide‐ranging clades thought previously to be single species (e.g. Matsui et al ., ; Stuart, ; Inger, Stuart & Iskandar, ; Wood et al ., , ; Grismer et al ., 2010b, 2012a; Malhotra et al ., ; Brown et al ., ; Johnson et al ., ; Nishikawa et al ., ; Loredo et al ., ). The infusion of a molecular phylogenetic data set into the morphology‐based classification of the wide‐ranging genus Hemiphyllodactylus not only contributes to this growing body of knowledge, but highlights the inherent tendency of morphological data sets to underestimate biodiversity in taxonomic revisions of widespread groups.…”