4.6 Article

Phylogenomic analyses reveal a Gondwanan origin and repeated out of India colonizations into Asia by tarantulas (Araneae: Theraphosidae)

期刊

PEERJ
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.11162

关键词

Araneae; Biogeography; Indian plate; Tarantulas; Theraphosidae; Gondwana; Time-calibration

资金

  1. Yale-NUS College Shared Instrumentation Grant [IG15-SI101]
  2. South East Asian Biodiversity Genomics (SEABIG) centre
  3. Singapore Ministry of Education [MOE2016-T2-2-137]
  4. Yale-NUS College [IG14-SI002, R-607-265-052-121]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study explores the evolution, ancestral ranges, and distributions of tarantulas, revealing a dual colonization of Asia by two distinct lineages at least 20 million years apart, as well as confirming a Gondwanan origin for the group. The current distributions of tarantulas are attributed to a combination of Gondwanan vicariance, continental rafting, and geographic radiation.
The study of biogeography seeks taxa that share a key set of characteristics, such as timescale of diversification, dispersal ability, and ecological lability. Tarantulas are ideal organisms for studying evolution over continental-scale biogeography given their time period of diversification, their mostly long-lived sedentary lives, low dispersal rate, and their nevertheless wide circumtropical distribution. In tandem with a time-calibrated transcriptome-based phylogeny generated by PhyloBayes, we estimate the ancestral ranges of ancient tarantulas using two methods, DEC+j and BBM, in the context of their evolution. We recover two ecologically distinct tarantula lineages that evolved on the Indian Plate before it collided with Asia, emphasizing the evolutionary significance of the region, and show that both lineages diversified across Asia at different times. The most ancestral tarantulas emerge on the Americas and Africa 120 Ma-105.5 Ma. We provide support for a dual colonization of Asia by two different tarantula lineages that occur at least 20 million years apart, as well as a Gondwanan origin for the group. We determine that their current distributions are attributable to a combination of Gondwanan vicariance, continental rafting, and geographic radiation. We also discuss emergent patterns in tarantula habitat preferences through time.

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