4.8 Article

New Guinea uplift opens ecological opportunity across a continent

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 19, Pages 4215-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.08.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bioplatforms Australia through the Australian Government National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)
  2. Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment (Equity Trustees Charitable Foundation & the Ecological Society of Australia)
  3. Museums Victoria 1854 Student Scholarship
  4. Alfred Nicholas Fellowship (University of Melbourne)
  5. Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
  6. Dame Margaret Blackwood Soroptimist Scholarship

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Sahul is a region that connects the world's largest tropical island and the oldest continent. This study examines the diversification of rodents in this region, showing that geological processes, biome transitions, and over-water colonization played important roles in driving the diversification of continental fauna.
Sahul unites the world's largest and highest tropical island and the oldest and most arid continent on the back-drop of dynamic environmental conditions. Massive geological uplift in New Guinea is predicted to have acted as a species pump from the late Miocene onward, but the impact of this process on biogeography and diversification remains untested across Sahul as a whole. To address this, we reconstruct the assembly of a recent and diverse radiation of rodents (Murinae: Hydromyini) spanning New Guinea, Australia, and oceanic islands. Using phylogenomic data from 270 specimens, including many recently extinct and highly elusive species, we find that the orogeny and expansion of New Guinea opened ecological opportunity and triggered diversification across a continent. After a single over-water colonization from Asia ca. 8.5 Ma, ancestral Hydromyini were restricted to the tropical rainforest of proto-New Guinea for 3.5 million years. Following a shift in diversification coincident with the orogeny of New Guinea ca. 5 Ma and subsequent colonization of Australia, transitions be-tween geographic regions (n = 24) and biomes (n = 34) become frequent. Recurrent over-water colonization between mainland and islands demonstrate how islands can play a substantial role in the assembly of continental fauna. Our results are consistent with a model of increased ecological opportunity across Sahul following major geological uplift in New Guinea ca. 5 Ma, with sustained diversification facilitated by over-water colonization from the Pleistocene to present. We show how geological processes, biome transitions, and over-water colonization collectively drove the diversification of an expansive continental radiation.

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