Biology Department, Macalester College, 1600 Grand Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55105, USA; Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2018 Oct;127:813-822. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.029. Epub 2018 Jun 21.
Austropurcellia, a genus of dispersal-limited arachnids endemic to isolated patches of coastal rainforest in Queensland, Australia, has a remarkable biogeographic history. The genus is a member of the family Pettalidae, which has a classical temperate Gondwanan distribution; previous work has suggested that Austropurcellia is an ancient lineage, with an origin that predates Gondwanan rifting. Subsequently, this lineage has persisted through major climatic fluctuations, such as major aridification during the Miocene and contraction and fragmentation of forest habitats during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). In order to understand Austropurcellia's evolutionary and biogeographic history, we generated DNA sequences from both mitochondrial and nuclear loci and combined this information with previously published datasets for the globally-distributed suborder Cyphophthalmi (i.e., all mite harvestmen). We generated phylogenetic trees using maximum likelihood and Bayesian approaches to date divergences using a relaxed molecular clock. According to our estimates, the family Pettalidae diversified in the late Jurassic, in accordance with Gondwanan vicariance. Within Pettalidae, Austropurcellia split from its sister group in the early Cretaceous and began to diversify some 15 Ma later. Therefore, its presence in Australia predates continental rifting-making it one of very few hypothesized examples of Gondwanan vicariance that have withstood rigorous testing. We found a steady rate of diversification within the genus, with no evidence for a shift in rate associated with Miocene aridification. Ages of splits between species predate the Pleistocene, consistent with a "museum" model in which forest refugia acted to preserve existing lineages rather than drive speciation within the group.
澳大利亚分散限制型蛛形纲动物 Austropurcellia 属是一个特有种属,分布在澳大利亚昆士兰州孤立的沿海雨林斑块中,具有显著的生物地理历史。该属是 Pettalidae 科的成员,该科具有经典的温带冈瓦纳分布;以前的工作表明,Austropurcellia 是一个古老的谱系,起源于冈瓦纳分裂之前。随后,该谱系通过主要的气候变化得以持续,例如中新世的主要干旱化以及末次冰期最大冰川期(LGM)期间森林栖息地的收缩和破碎化。为了了解 Austropurcellia 的进化和生物地理历史,我们从线粒体和核基因座生成了 DNA 序列,并将这些信息与先前发表的全球分布的亚目 Cyphophthalmi(即所有螨类 harvestmen)数据集相结合。我们使用最大似然法和贝叶斯方法生成系统发育树,使用松弛分子钟来估计分歧时间。根据我们的估计,Pettalidae 科在侏罗纪晚期多样化,与冈瓦纳分裂有关。在 Pettalidae 科内,Austropurcellia 与其姐妹群在白垩纪早期分化,并在 1500 万年前开始多样化。因此,它在澳大利亚的存在早于大陆分裂——这使其成为为数不多的经过严格测试的冈瓦纳分裂假设案例之一。我们发现该属内的多样化率稳定,没有证据表明与中新世干旱化相关的速率变化。物种之间的分裂年龄早于更新世,与“博物馆”模型一致,其中森林避难所有助于保存现有的谱系,而不是推动该组内的物种形成。