Amazonian Amphibian Diversity Is Primarily Derived from Late Miocene Andean Lineages
Juan C. Santos,Luis A. Coloma,Kyle Summers,Janalee P. Caldwell,Richard H. Ree,David C. Cannatella +5 more
TL;DR: This work reconstructed the biogeography of the poison frog clade (Dendrobatidae) using a novel method of ancestral area reconstruction and relaxed Bayesian clock analyses, and rejected an Amazonian center-of-origin in favor of a complex connectivity model expanding over the Neotropics.
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Abstract: The Neotropics contains half of remaining rainforests and Earth's largest reservoir of amphibian biodiversity. However, determinants of Neotropical biodiversity (i.e., vicariance, dispersals, extinctions, and radiations) earlier than the Quaternary are largely unstudied. Using a novel method of ancestral area reconstruction and relaxed Bayesian clock analyses, we reconstructed the biogeography of the poison frog clade (Dendrobatidae). We rejected an Amazonian center-of-origin in favor of a complex connectivity model expanding over the Neotropics. We inferred 14 dispersals into and 18 out of Amazonia to adjacent regions; the Andes were the major source of dispersals into Amazonia. We found three episodes of lineage dispersal with two interleaved periods of vicariant events between South and Central America. During the late Miocene, Amazonian, and Central American-Chocoan lineages significantly increased their diversity compared to the Andean and Guianan-Venezuelan-Brazilian Shield counterparts. Significant percentage of dendrobatid diversity in Amazonia and Choco resulted from repeated immigrations, with radiations at <10.0 million years ago (MYA), rather than in situ diversification. In contrast, the Andes, Venezuelan Highlands, and Guiana Shield have undergone extended in situ diversification at near constant rate since the Oligocene. The effects of Miocene paleogeographic events on Neotropical diversification dynamics provided the framework under which Quaternary patterns of endemism evolved.
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Citations
Amazonia Through Time: Andean Uplift, Climate Change, Landscape Evolution, and Biodiversity
Carina Hoorn,Frank P. Wesselingh,H. ter Steege,Mauricio A. Bermúdez,Andrés Mora,Jan Sevink,Isabel Sanmartín,A. Sanchez-Meseguer,Cajsa Lisa Anderson,J. P. Figueiredo,Carlos Jaramillo,Douglas Riff,Francisco Ricardo Negri,Henry Hooghiemstra,John G. Lundberg,Tanja Stadler,Tiina Särkinen,Alexandre Antonelli,Alexandre Antonelli +18 more
TL;DR: It is shown that Andean uplift was crucial for the evolution of Amazonian landscapes and ecosystems, and that current biodiversity patterns are rooted deep in the pre-Quaternary.
A large-scale phylogeny of Amphibia including over 2800 species, and a revised classification of extant frogs, salamanders, and caecilians
R. Alexander Pyron,John J. Wiens +1 more
TL;DR: This study provides further evidence that the supermatrix approach provides an effective strategy for inferring large-scale phylogenies using the combined results of previous studies, despite many taxa having extensive missing data.
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Tracing the impact of the Andean uplift on Neotropical plant evolution
TL;DR: The results suggest that the Rubiaceae originated in the Paleotropics and used the boreotropical connection to reach South America, and the biogeographic patterns found corroborate the existence of a long-lasting dispersal barrier between the Northern and Central Andes, the “Western Andean Portal.”
Animal biodiversity: An outline of higher-level classification and survey of taxonomic richness (Addenda 2013).
TL;DR: The kingdom Animalia is here estimated to have a total of 1,659,420 described species in 40 phyla, among these, the most successful phylum Arthropoda alone represents 1,302,809 species, or about 78.5% of the total.
Building mountain biodiversity: Geological and evolutionary processes
Carsten Rahbek,Carsten Rahbek,Carsten Rahbek,Michael K. Borregaard,Alexandre Antonelli,Robert K. Colwell,Robert K. Colwell,Robert K. Colwell,Ben G. Holt,David Nogués-Bravo,Christian M. Ø. Rasmussen,Katherine Richardson,Minik T. Rosing,Robert J. Whittaker,Robert J. Whittaker,Jon Fjeldså,Jon Fjeldså +16 more
TL;DR: The high biodiversity of certain mountains reflects the interplay of multiple evolutionary mechanisms: enhanced speciation rates with distinct opportunities for coexistence and persistence of lineages, shaped by long-term climatic changes interacting with topographically dynamic landscapes.
576
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