Owen Christopher L, Marshall David C, Hill Kathy B R, Simon Chris
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Road, Unit 3043, Storrs, CT 06269-3043, USA.
Computational Biology Institute, George Washington University, Innovation Hall, Suite 305, 45085 University Drive, Ashburn, VA 20147-2766, USA.
Syst Biol. 2017 Jul 1;66(4):569-589. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/syw078.
Over the last 30 million years, Australia's landscape has undergone dramatic cooling and drying due to the establishment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and change in global CO$_{2}$ levels. Studies have shown that many Australian organisms went extinct during these major cooling events, while others experienced adaptive radiations and increases in diversification rates as a result of exploiting new niches in the arid zone. Despite the many studies on diversification and biogeography in Australia, few have been continent-wide and none have focused on a group of organisms adapted to feeding on plants. We studied 162 species of cicadas in the Australian Pauropsalta complex, a large generic lineage within the tribe Cicadettini. We asked whether there were changes in the diversification rate of Pauropsalta over time and if so: 1) which clades were associated with the rate change? 2) did timing of rate shifts correspond to known periods of dramatic historical climate change, 3) did increases in diversification rate along select lineages correspond to adaptive radiations with movement into the arid zone? To address these questions, we estimated a molecular phylogeny of the Pauropsalta complex using ${\sim}$5300 bp of nucleotide sequence data distributed among five loci (one mtDNA locus and four nDNA loci). We found that this large group of cicadas did not diversify at a constant rate as they spread through Australia; instead the signature of decreasing diversification rate changed roughly around the time of the expansion of the east Antarctic ice sheets ${\sim}$16 Ma and the glaciation of the northern hemisphere ${\sim}$3 Ma. Unlike other Australian taxa, the Pauropsalta complex did not explosively radiate in response to an early invasion of the arid zone. Instead multiple groups invaded the arid zone and experienced rates of diversification similar to mesic-distributed taxa. We found evidence for relictual groups, located in pre-Mesozoic habitat, that have not diversified and continue to reside on mesic hosts in isolated "habitat islands". Future work should focus on groups of similar ages with similar distribution patterns to determine whether this tempo and pattern of diversification and biogeography is consistent with evidence from other phytophagous insects.
在过去的3000万年里,由于南极绕极流的形成和全球二氧化碳水平的变化,澳大利亚的地貌经历了剧烈的冷却和干燥。研究表明,许多澳大利亚生物在这些重大的冷却事件中灭绝,而其他生物则经历了适应性辐射,并由于在干旱地区开拓新的生态位而导致多样化速率增加。尽管对澳大利亚的多样化和生物地理学进行了许多研究,但很少有研究是全大陆范围的,而且没有一项研究聚焦于一群适应以植物为食的生物。我们研究了澳大利亚Pauropsalta复合体中的162种蝉,该复合体是蝉族Cicadettini中的一个大型属类群。我们询问Pauropsalta的多样化速率是否随时间发生了变化,如果是:1)哪些分支与速率变化相关?2)速率变化的时间是否与已知的剧烈历史气候变化时期相对应?3)特定谱系中多样化速率的增加是否与向干旱地区迁移的适应性辐射相对应?为了解决这些问题,我们使用分布在五个基因座(一个线粒体DNA基因座和四个核DNA基因座)上约5300个碱基对的核苷酸序列数据,估计了Pauropsalta复合体的分子系统发育。我们发现,这一大群蝉在扩散到澳大利亚的过程中,其多样化速率并非恒定不变;相反,多样化速率下降的特征大约在南极东部冰盖扩张约1600万年前和北半球冰川作用约300万年前发生了变化。与其他澳大利亚分类群不同,Pauropsalta复合体并没有因早期侵入干旱地区而发生爆发性辐射。相反,多个群体侵入了干旱地区,并经历了与分布在中生境中的分类群相似的多样化速率。我们发现了位于中生代以前栖息地的残遗群体的证据,这些群体没有多样化,并且继续栖息在孤立的“栖息地岛屿”中的中生境寄主上。未来的工作应聚焦于具有相似分布模式的相似年龄群体,以确定这种多样化和生物地理学的节奏和模式是否与其他植食性昆虫的证据一致。