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GEOGRAPHIC AND TAXONOMIC DISPARITIES IN SPECIES DIVERSITY: DISPERSAL AND DIVERSIFICATION RATES ACROSS WALLACE'S LINE

Broad-scale patterns of species diversity have received much attention in the literature, yet the mechanisms behind their formation may not explain species richness disparities across small spatial scales. Few taxa display high species diversity on either side of Wallace's Line and our understa...

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Published in:Evolution 2013-07, Vol.67 (7), p.2058-2071
Main Authors: Bacon, Christine D., Michonneau, François, Henderson, Andrew J., McKenna, Miles J., Milroy, Arwen M., Simmons, Mark P.
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container_start_page 2058
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Michonneau, François
Henderson, Andrew J.
McKenna, Miles J.
Milroy, Arwen M.
Simmons, Mark P.
description Broad-scale patterns of species diversity have received much attention in the literature, yet the mechanisms behind their formation may not explain species richness disparities across small spatial scales. Few taxa display high species diversity on either side of Wallace's Line and our understanding of the processes causing this biogeographical pattern remains limited, particularly in plant lineages. To understand the evolution of this biogeographical pattern, a time-calibrated molecular phylogeny of Livistoninae palms (Arecaceae) was used to infer the colonization history of the Sahul tectonic plate region and to test for disparities in diversification rates across taxa and across each side of Wallace's Line. Our analyses allowed us to examine how timing, migration history, and shifts in diversification rates have contributed to shape the biogeographical pattern observed in Livistoninae. We inferred that each of the three genera found in Sahul crossed Wallace's Line only once and relatively recently. In addition, at least two of the three dispersing genera underwent an elevation in their diversification rate leading to high species richness on each side of Wallacea. The correspondence of our results with Southeast Asian geologic and climatic history show how palms emerge as excellent models for understanding the historical formation of fine-scale biogeographic patterns in a phylogenetic framework.
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects adaptive radiation
Animal migration
arecaceae
Arecaceae - classification
Arecaceae - genetics
Asia, Southeastern
Bayes Theorem
Biodiversity
Biogeography
Biological taxonomies
divergence times
diversification rate
DNA, Plant - genetics
Evolution
Evolutionary Biology
Evolutionsbiologi
Genera
Geographic regions
Geology
island
last glacial period
Licuala
Livistona
Livistoninae
lizards
Modeling
molecular phylogenies
phylogenetic analyses
Phylogenetics
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
plastid dna
Saribus
Sequence Analysis, DNA
southeast-asia
Species diversity
title GEOGRAPHIC AND TAXONOMIC DISPARITIES IN SPECIES DIVERSITY: DISPERSAL AND DIVERSIFICATION RATES ACROSS WALLACE'S LINE
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