Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 Colorado Blvd., Denver, CO 80205, USA; University of Colorado Denver, 1201 Larimer St, Denver, CO 80204, USA.
Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 Colorado Blvd., Denver, CO 80205, USA; University of Colorado Denver, 1201 Larimer St, Denver, CO 80204, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2024 Dec;201:108193. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108193. Epub 2024 Sep 19.
Abiotic variables can influence species distributions, often restricting taxa to an acquired climatic signature or conversely, related species are conserved in the same ecological space over millions of years. An investigation into how abiotic change has shaped geographic distributions of taxa may be key to understanding diversification of lineages, and in the absence of reliable morphological characteristics, such information may support taxonomic units at multiple scales. Here, we examine the historical biogeography and patterns of habitat preference within the North American solifuge family, Eremobatidae. A previous study demonstrated that a major taxonomic revision of Eremobatidae is warranted, however recent studies demonstrate high levels of morphological convergence within the group, thus a re-classification of generic boundaries using additional information must be prioritized before we can formally begin solid revisionary efforts. In this study, we aimed to reconstruct a well-resolved phylogenetic hypothesis of Eremobatidae by filtering UCE loci based on informativeness, by mitigating the effect of cogenic UCE on phylogenetic estimation, and by supplementing our curated UCE loci with mitochondrial information. Using our preferred topology, in conjunction with published estimated divergence dates for Eremobatidae, we inferred a time-calibrated phylogenetic hypothesis to inform the historical biogeography and patterns of habitat preference. The two major habitat types that were observed for Eremobatidae were warm deserts for early diverging taxa and a subsequent evolution to cold deserts and Mediterranean California ecoregions for later diverging taxa. Eremobatid niche space, determined by temperature and precipitation, has been conserved for at least 25 million years in North America, supporting a warm desert origin, and thus supporting high species richness in the Sonoran and Mexican Plateau. Overall, our study provides support for new generic level designations within Eremobatidae.
非生物变量会影响物种的分布,通常将分类单元限制在特定的气候特征中,或者相反,相关的物种在数百万年的时间里保存在相同的生态空间中。研究非生物变化如何塑造分类单元的地理分布可能是理解谱系多样化的关键,而且在缺乏可靠形态特征的情况下,此类信息可能支持多个尺度的分类单元。在这里,我们研究了北美地蜈蚣科(Eremobatidae)的历史生物地理学和生境偏好模式。先前的研究表明,有必要对 Eremobatidae 进行重大分类修订,然而最近的研究表明,该组内存在高度的形态趋同,因此,在我们能够正式开始进行修订工作之前,必须优先使用其他信息重新分类属的边界。在这项研究中,我们旨在通过基于信息量过滤 UCE 基因座、减轻共效 UCE 对系统发育估计的影响以及用线粒体信息补充我们精心挑选的 UCE 基因座,来重建一个分辨率较高的 Eremobatidae 系统发育假说。利用我们首选的拓扑结构,结合已发表的 Eremobatidae 估计分化日期,我们推断出一个时间校准的系统发育假说,以告知历史生物地理学和生境偏好模式。观察到的地蜈蚣科的两个主要生境类型是早期分化类群的温暖沙漠和随后向寒冷沙漠和加利福尼亚地中海生态区进化的类群。Eremobatid 生态位空间由温度和降水决定,在北美至少已经保存了 2500 万年,支持温暖沙漠起源,从而支持索诺兰和墨西哥高原的高物种丰富度。总的来说,我们的研究为 Eremobatidae 中的新属级分类提供了支持。