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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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Phylogeographic Patterns in Two Southern Hemisphere Species of Calyptrochaeta (Daltoniaceae, Bryophyta)

TL;DR: Divergence times suggest that C. asplenioides diversified in a time frame that does not support vicariance associated with continental drift, but rather dispersal, to explain the disjunct distribution of this species.
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Phylogeography of the genus Pisolithus revisited with some additional taxa from New Caledonia and Japan

TL;DR: Biogeographical patterns of Pisolithus indicate that long distance dispersal may be the most important factor, and this may be associated with its ability to switch ectomycorrhizal hosts rather frequently.
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A revision of the textricellin spider genus Raveniella (Araneae : Araneoidea : Micropholcommatidae): exploring patterns of phylogeny and biogeography in an Australian biodiversity hotspot

TL;DR: Most species of Raveniella were found to occupy long, highly autapomorphic molecular branches exhibiting little intraspecific variation, and an analysis of ITS2 rRNA secondary structures among different species ofRaveniella revealed the presence of an extraordinary hypervariable helix, ranging from 31 to over 400 nucleotides in length.
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Cave crickets and cave weta (orthoptera, rhaphidophoridae) from the southern end of the world: a molecular phylogeny test of biogeographical hypotheses

TL;DR: The reconstructed molecular phylogeny and historical biogeography of a sample of cricket species, most of them cave-dwelling, belonging to the subfamily Macropathinae, suggests that lineage formation is not consistent with vicariant processes and requires either some long-distance dispersal, or an inconceivable age of origin of this family of insects, enabling the prior existence of all lineages in Gondwanaland with subsequent regional extinction.
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Revalidation of the Argentinian pouched lamprey Geotria macrostoma (Burmeister, 1868) with molecular and morphological evidence.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the Argentinian pouched lamprey, found along a broad latitudinal gradient on the south-west Atlantic coast of South America, should be named as Geotria macrostoma (Burmeister, 1868), returning to its earliest valid designation in Argentina.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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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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