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三次走出印度:亚洲森林蝎子的多样化揭示了对东南亚的三次殖民。

Out of India, thrice: diversification of Asian forest scorpions reveals three colonizations of Southeast Asia.

机构信息

Richard Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79th St., New York, NY, 10024-5192, USA.

Scorpion Systematics Research Group, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79th St., New York, NY, 10024-5192, USA.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2020 Dec 18;10(1):22301. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-78183-8.

Abstract

The 'Out of India' hypothesis is often invoked to explain patterns of distribution among Southeast Asian taxa. According to this hypothesis, Southeast Asian taxa originated in Gondwana, diverged from their Gondwanan relatives when the Indian subcontinent rifted from Gondwana in the Late Jurassic, and colonized Southeast Asia when it collided with Eurasia in the early Cenozoic. A growing body of evidence suggests these events were far more complex than previously understood, however. The first quantitative reconstruction of the biogeography of Asian forest scorpions (Scorpionidae Latreille, 1802: Heterometrinae Simon, 1879) is presented here. Divergence time estimation, ancestral range estimation, and diversification analyses are used to determine the origins, dispersal and diversification patterns of these scorpions, providing a timeline for their biogeographical history that can be summarized into four major events. (1) Heterometrinae diverged from other Scorpionidae on the African continent after the Indian subcontinent became separated in the Cretaceous. (2) Environmental stresses during the Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) mass extinction caused range contraction, restricting one clade of Heterometrinae to refugia in southern India (the Western Ghats) and Sri Lanka (the Central Highlands). (3) Heterometrinae dispersed to Southeast Asia three times during India's collision with Eurasia, the first dispersal event occurring as the Indian subcontinent brushed up against the western side of Sumatra, and the other two events occurring as India moved closer to Eurasia. (4) Indian Heterometrinae, confined to southern India and Sri Lanka during the KT mass extinction, recolonized the Deccan Plateau and northern India, diversifying into new, more arid habitats after environmental conditions stabilized. These hypotheses, which are congruent with the geological literature and biogeographical analyses of other taxa from South and Southeast Asia, contribute to an improved understanding of the dispersal and diversification patterns of taxa in this biodiverse and geologically complex region.

摘要

“走出印度”假说常被用来解释东南亚分类单元的分布模式。根据该假说,东南亚分类单元起源于冈瓦纳大陆,在侏罗纪晚期印度次大陆从冈瓦纳大陆分裂时与冈瓦纳大陆的亲缘关系分离,并在新生代早期与欧亚大陆碰撞时殖民东南亚。然而,越来越多的证据表明,这些事件远比之前理解的要复杂。本文首次对亚洲森林蝎子(Scorpionidae Latreille, 1802:Heterometrinae Simon, 1879)的生物地理学进行了定量重建。通过分歧时间估计、祖先范围估计和多样化分析,确定了这些蝎子的起源、扩散和多样化模式,为它们的生物地理历史提供了一个时间轴,可以概括为四个主要事件。(1)在印度次大陆在白垩纪分离之后, Heterometrinae 从非洲大陆的其他蝎子科分化出来。(2)白垩纪-第三纪(KT)大灭绝期间的环境压力导致范围收缩,限制了一个 Heterometrinae 分支在印度南部(西高止山脉)和斯里兰卡(中央高地)的避难所。(3)印度次大陆与欧亚大陆碰撞期间,Heterometrinae 三次向东南亚扩散,第一次扩散事件发生在印度次大陆擦过苏门答腊岛的西侧,另外两次发生在印度向欧亚大陆靠拢时。(4)在 KT 大灭绝期间,局限于印度南部和斯里兰卡的印度 Heterometrinae 重新殖民德干高原和印度北部,在环境条件稳定后,多样化到新的、更干旱的栖息地。这些假说与地质文献以及南亚和东南亚其他分类单元的生物地理学分析一致,有助于更好地理解这个生物多样性和地质复杂地区的分类单元的扩散和多样化模式。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/54b9/7749168/a607257f9aac/41598_2020_78183_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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