scholarly journals Historical biogeography of the Fanniidae (Insecta, Diptera): A commentary on the age of the family

2012 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 335-338
Author(s):  
PETER LOWENBERG-NETO ◽  
KIRSTERN L.F. HASEYAMA ◽  
CLAUDIO J.B. DE CARVALHO
2001 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 270-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise P. Wynen ◽  
Simon D. Goldsworthy ◽  
Stephen J. Insley ◽  
Mark Adams ◽  
John W. Bickham ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Menglin Wang ◽  
Simon Hellemans ◽  
Jan Šobotník ◽  
Jigyasa Arora ◽  
Aleš Buček ◽  
...  

AbstractTermites are social cockroaches distributed throughout warm temperate and tropical ecosystems. The ancestor of modern termites (crown-Isoptera) occurred during the earliest Cretaceous, approximately 140 million years ago, suggesting that both vicariance through continental drift and overseas dispersal may have shaped the distribution of early diverging termite lineages. We reconstruct the historical biogeography of three early diverging termite families – Stolotermitidae, Hodotermitidae, and Archotermopsidae – using the nuclear rRNA genes and mitochondrial genomes of 27 samples. Our analyses confirmed the monophyly of Stolotermitidae + Hodotermitidae + Archotermopsidae (clade Teletisoptera), with Stolotermitidae diverging from a monophyletic Hodotermitidae + Archotermopsidae approximately 100.3 Ma (94.3–110.4 Ma, 95% HPD), and with Archotermopsidae paraphyletic to a monophyletic Hodotermitidae. The Oriental Archotermopsis and the Nearctic Zootermopsis diverged 50.8 Ma (40.7–61.4 Ma, 95% HPD) before land connections between the Palearctic region and North America ceased to exist. The African Hodotermes + Microhodotermes diverged from Anacanthotermes, a genus found in Africa and Asia, 32.1 Ma (24.8–39.9 Ma, 95% HPD), and the most recent common ancestor of Anacanthotermes lived 10.7 Ma (7.3–14.3 Ma, 95% HPD), suggesting that Anacanthotermes dispersed to Asia using the land bridge connecting Africa and Eurasia ∼18–20 Ma. In contrast, the common ancestors of modern Porotermes and Stolotermes lived 20.2 Ma (15.7–25.1 Ma, 95% HPD) and 26.6 Ma (18.3–35.6 Ma, 95% HPD), respectively, indicating that the presence of these genera in South America, Africa, and Australia involved over-water dispersals. Our results suggest that early diverging termite lineages acquired their current distribution through a combination of over-water dispersals and dispersal via land bridges. We clarify the classification by resolving the paraphyly of Archotermopsidae, restricting the family to Archotermopsis and Zootermopsis, and elevating Hodotermopsinae (Hodotermopsis) as Hodotermopsidae (status novum).


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4890 (4) ◽  
pp. 567-577
Author(s):  
JOHN S. WEAVER ◽  
FRANÇOIS-MARIE GIBON ◽  
PAVEL CHVOJKA ◽  
JÁNOS OLÁH

New taxa of Dipseudopsidae from Madagascar are described, including a new genus, Ollieopteryx, and three new species, Ollieopteryx fianarana, O. inopinata, and O. dakshan. The hypothetical phylogenetic tree of the Dipseudopsidae (Weaver & Malicky 1994) is revised to include Ollieopteryx, an isolated relic. Scenarios on the historical biogeography of the family are hypothesized. 


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