4.5 Article

Eastward from Africa: palaeocurrent-mediated chameleon dispersal to the Seychelles islands

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 225-228

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0701

Keywords

biogeography; overseas dispersal; Indian Ocean; Chamaeleonidae; Archaius

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [VE247/3-1]
  2. National Science Foundation [EF 0334923]
  3. South African National Biodiversity Institute

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Madagascar and the Seychelles are Gondwanan remnants currently isolated in the Indian Ocean. In the Late Cretaceous, these islands were joined with India to form the Indigascar landmass, which itself then split into its three component parts around the start of the Tertiary. This history is reflected in the biota of the Seychelles, which appears to contain examples of both vicariance- and dispersal-mediated divergence from Malagasy or Indian sister taxa. One lineage for which this has been assumed but never thoroughly tested is the Seychellean tiger chameleon, a species assigned to the otherwise Madagascarendemic genus Calumma. We present a multi-locus phylogenetic study of chameleons, and find that the Seychellean species is actually the sister taxon of a southern African clade and requires accomodation in its own genus as Archaius tigris. Divergence dating and biogeographic analyses indicate an origin by transoceanic dispersal from Africa to the Seychelles in the Eocene-Oligocene, providing, to our knowledge, the first such well-documented example and supporting novel palaeocurrent reconstructions.

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