Dated phylogeny and ancestral range estimation of sand scorpions (Buthidae: Buthacus) reveal Early Miocene divergence across land bridges connecting Africa and Asia

Author(s):  
Shlomo Cain ◽  
Stephanie F. Loria ◽  
Rachel Ben-Shlomo ◽  
Lorenzo Prendini ◽  
Eran Gefen
2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christiana McDonald-Spicer ◽  
Nunzio J. Knerr ◽  
Francisco Encinas-Viso ◽  
Alexander N. Schmidt-Lebuhn

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilson X Guillory ◽  
Jason L Brown

Abstract Ancestral range estimation and projection of niche models into the past have both become common in evolutionary studies where the ancient distributions of organisms are in question. However, these methods are hampered by complementary hurdles: discrete characterization of areas in ancestral range estimation can be overly coarse, especially at shallow timescales, and niche model projection neglects evolution. Phylogenetic niche modeling accounts for both of these issues by incorporating knowledge of evolutionary relationships into a characterization of environmental tolerances. We present a new method for phylogenetic niche modeling, implemented in R. Given past and present climate data, taxon occurrence data, and a time-calibrated phylogeny, our method constructs niche models for each extant taxon, uses ancestral character estimation to reconstruct ancestral niche models, and projects these models into paleoclimate data to provide a historical estimate of the geographic range of a lineage. Models either at nodes or along branches of the phylogeny can be estimated. We demonstrate our method on a small group of dendrobatid frogs and show that it can make inferences given species with restricted ranges and little occurrence data. We also use simulations to show that our method can reliably reconstruct the niche of a known ancestor in both geographic and environmental space. Our method brings together fields as disparate as ecological niche modeling, phylogenetics, and ancestral range estimation in a user-friendly package. [Ancestral range estimation; ancestral state reconstruction; biogeography; Dendrobatidae; ecological niche modeling; paleoclimate; phylogeography; species distribution modeling.]


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose Luis Pinzón

Effects of differential extinction rates remain being an issue in biogeographic and evolutionary studies. Here, I use empirical examples and simulated datasets to asses how the specification of different extinction rates influences ancestral range estimation in historical biogeography. The results showed that variations in scale and asymmetry of extinction rates may have notorious effects in the accuracy of biogeographic inferences, specially when the rates of extinction are high. Further work may explore the behavior of current statistical methods of biogeographic inference with different estimates of extinction based on novel developments in this field.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel F A Toussaint ◽  
Andrew E Z Short

Abstract The genus Cymbiodyta Bedel, 1881 (Coleoptera: Hydrophilidae: Enochrinae) comprises 31 species distributed in both the Old and New World portions of the Holarctic realm. Although the species and taxonomy are relatively well known, the phylogenetic relationships among Cymbiodyta and the evolutionary history of the genus remain unexplored. To understand the systematics and evolution of this lineage, we sequenced five gene fragments for about half of the species in the genus, including most major morphological groups. We also estimated divergence times to test the hypothesis that Cymbiodyta beetles took advantage of the different land bridges connecting the Palearctic and Nearctic regions, that became subaerial in the Cretaceous and Paleocene. Our results recover the eastern Nearctic genus Helocombus Horn, 1890 nesting within Cymbiodyta. Therefore, we synonymize Helocombus syn. n. with Cymbiodyta, resulting in one new combination, Cymbiodyta bifidus (LeConte 1855) comb. n. Our dating analyses and ancestral range estimation support a Nearctic origin of Cymbiodyta in the late Cretaceous about 100 million year ago. The placement of the unique Palearctic species on a long branch as sister to the rest of the clade and the dating results cannot reject a role of the De Geer and/or Thulean routes in the colonization of the Palearctic region from the Nearctic; however, they do not support a role for Beringia in the more recent colonization of the Oriental region.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose Luis Pinzón

Effects of differential extinction rates remain being an issue in biogeographic and evolutionary studies. Here, I use empirical examples and simulated datasets to asses how the specification of different extinction rates influences ancestral range estimation in historical biogeography. The results showed that variations in scale and asymmetry of extinction rates may have notorious effects in the accuracy of biogeographic inferences, specially when the rates of extinction are high. Further work may explore the behavior of current statistical methods of biogeographic inference with different estimates of extinction based on novel developments in this field.


1970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Hilgendorf ◽  
John C. Simons
Keyword(s):  

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