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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Southern Hemisphere Biogeography Inferred by Event-Based Models: Plant versus Animal Patterns

Isabel Sanmartín, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2004 - 
- Vol. 53, Iss: 2, pp 216-243
TLDR
The results confirm the hybrid origin of the South American biota: there has been surprisingly little biotic exchange between the northern tropical and the southern temperate regions of South America, especially for animals.
Abstract
The Southern Hemisphere has traditionally been considered as having a fundamentally vicariant history. The common trans-Pacific disjunctions are usually explained by the sequential breakup of the supercontinent Gondwana during the last 165 million years, causing successive division of an ancestral biota. However, recent biogeographic studies, based on molecular estimates and more accurate paleogeographic reconstructions, indicate that dispersal may have been more important than traditionally assumed. We examined the relative roles played by vicariance and dispersal in shaping Southern Hemisphere biotas by analyzing a large data set of 54 animal and 19 plant phylogenies, including marsupials, ratites, and southern beeches (1,393 terminals). Parsimony-based tree fitting in conjunction with permutation tests was used to examine to what extent Southern Hemisphere biogeographic patterns fit the breakup sequence of Gondwana and to identify concordant dispersal patterns. Consistent with other studies, the animal data are congruent with the geological sequence of Gondwana breakup: (Africa(New Zealand(southern South America, Australia))). Trans-Antarctic dispersal (Australia southern South America) is also significantly more frequent than any other dispersal event in animals, which may be explained by the long period of geological contact between Australia and South America via Antarctica. In contrast, the dominant pattern in plants, (southern South America(Australia, New Zealand)), is better explained by dispersal, particularly the prevalence of trans-Tasman dispersal between New Zealand and Australia. Our results also confirm the hybrid origin of the South American biota: there has been surprisingly little biotic exchange between the northern tropical and the southern temperate regions of South America, especially for animals.

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Citations
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Miocene Dispersal Drives Island Radiations in the Palm Tribe Trachycarpeae (Arecaceae)

TL;DR: Couvreur et al. as discussed by the authors studied three island groups of the palm tribe Trachycarpeae (Arecaceae/Palmae) and provided both the analysis of each independent radiation and comparisons across the tribe to address general processes that drive island diversification.

introduçãobiogeography: an introduction

TL;DR: Methods to infer the biogeographical history of lineages through the reconstruction of events that may have affected distributions of taxa through time are discussed, and an example of use with a lineage of lizards from tropical South America is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ichthyofaunistic colonization and complex biogeographic history of the southern portion of the Southwest Atlantic Ocean

TL;DR: In this article , the authors highlight the geological processes that resulted in the current conformation of the southern Southwest Atlantic Ocean, and explore the heterogeneous composition of the marine ichthyofauna found between 33° and 56° from a paleobiological perspective.

Ecological and historical drivers of diversification in the fly genus

TL;DR: This integrative study aims to test the monophyly of the Chiastochetaeco-morphological groups by inferring a mitochondrial phylogeny and shows that the genus arose during the Pliocene in Europe, indicating that the cycles of global cooling over the last mil-lion years had an impact on the radiation of the group.
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Phylogeography of Neopurcellia salmoni, a widespread mite harvestman from the South Island of New Zealand, with the first report of male polymorphism in the suborder Cyphophthalmi (Arachnida: Opiliones)

TL;DR: Forster, 1948 is a mite harvestman found throughout the forests of the west coast of New Zealand's South Island as discussed by the authors, and two distinct male morphotypes distinguished by the presence or absence of dorsal glandular pores.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG II

TL;DR: A revised and updated classification for the families of the flowering plants is provided in this paper, which includes Austrobaileyales, Canellales, Gunnerales, Crossosomatales and Celastrales.
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TL;DR: The metric presented in this paper makes possible the comparison of the many nonbinary phylogenetic trees appearing in the literature, and provides an objective procedure for comparing the different methods for constructing phylogenetics trees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dispersal-Vicariance Analysis: A New Approach to the Quantification of Historical Biogeography

TL;DR: This work presents a new biogeographic method, dispersal-vicariance analysis, which reconstructs the ancestral distributions in a given phylogeny without any prior assumptions about the form of area relationships, and describes the algorithms that find the optimal reconstruction.
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