Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation
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2013
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Aim We test three alternative hypotheses for the disjunct Mediterranean-southern African distribution of endophagous weevils within the genera Rhinusa and Gymnetron (Coleoptera: Curculionidae): (1) a Palaearctic origin with dispersal to southern Africa; (2) a southern African origin with dispersal to the Palaearctic; and (3) a widespread ancestral distribution fragmented by vicariance. Divergence times are estimated to provide an approximate temporal framework for the evolution of the group and to evaluate potential palaeogeographical scenarios. Location Southern Africa, the Mediterranean region, the Palaearctic and eastern Africa. Methods Freshly collected and dry, pinned samples of weevils were used as a source of DNA. Prior genetic information was used to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons within the 16S ribosomal RNA gene (16S). Phylogenetic reconstructions using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data and molecular... dating techniques were used to infer the biogeographical history of Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. A statistical approach to dispersal-vicariance analysis (s-diva) was used to further assess biogeographical hypotheses. Results Successful polymerase chain reaction amplification of targeted short 16S DNA sequences (150bp) from dry, pinned specimens provided for increased species sampling of Rhinusa and Gymnetron by 230%, greatly expanding species representation from southern Africa. Phylogenetic reconstructions and s-diva analyses support a southern African origin for Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. Divergence time estimates suggest southern African and Palaearctic lineages diverged c.11.6-7.4Ma. Main conclusions Rhinusa and Gymnetron represent a complex of lineages with a shared evolutionary history of range expansions from southern Africa into the Palaearctic. Our results support a late Miocene vicariance scenario, most likely as a result of repeated desertification. The use of prior genetic information to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons offers a useful approach for molecular phylogenetic analyses incorporating archival material.
Ključne reči:
Archival tissue / Curculionidae / disjunct distribution / dispersal / Palaearctic / phylogeny / southern Africa / vicariance / weevilIzvor:
Journal of Biogeography, 2013, 40, 7, 1348-1359Izdavač:
- Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken
Finansiranje / projekti:
- Mexican Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT)
- Agrobiodiverzitet i korišćenje zemljišta u Srbiji: integrisana procena biodiverziteta ključnih grupa artropoda i biljnih patogena (RS-MESTD-Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)-43001)
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12081
ISSN: 0305-0270
WoS: 000320175400013
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84880080842
Institucija/grupa
IZBISTY - JOUR AU - Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo AU - Caldara, Roberto AU - Toševski, Ivo AU - Emerson, Brent C. PY - 2013 UR - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/294 AB - Aim We test three alternative hypotheses for the disjunct Mediterranean-southern African distribution of endophagous weevils within the genera Rhinusa and Gymnetron (Coleoptera: Curculionidae): (1) a Palaearctic origin with dispersal to southern Africa; (2) a southern African origin with dispersal to the Palaearctic; and (3) a widespread ancestral distribution fragmented by vicariance. Divergence times are estimated to provide an approximate temporal framework for the evolution of the group and to evaluate potential palaeogeographical scenarios. Location Southern Africa, the Mediterranean region, the Palaearctic and eastern Africa. Methods Freshly collected and dry, pinned samples of weevils were used as a source of DNA. Prior genetic information was used to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons within the 16S ribosomal RNA gene (16S). Phylogenetic reconstructions using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data and molecular dating techniques were used to infer the biogeographical history of Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. A statistical approach to dispersal-vicariance analysis (s-diva) was used to further assess biogeographical hypotheses. Results Successful polymerase chain reaction amplification of targeted short 16S DNA sequences (150bp) from dry, pinned specimens provided for increased species sampling of Rhinusa and Gymnetron by 230%, greatly expanding species representation from southern Africa. Phylogenetic reconstructions and s-diva analyses support a southern African origin for Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. Divergence time estimates suggest southern African and Palaearctic lineages diverged c.11.6-7.4Ma. Main conclusions Rhinusa and Gymnetron represent a complex of lineages with a shared evolutionary history of range expansions from southern Africa into the Palaearctic. Our results support a late Miocene vicariance scenario, most likely as a result of repeated desertification. The use of prior genetic information to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons offers a useful approach for molecular phylogenetic analyses incorporating archival material. PB - Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken T2 - Journal of Biogeography T1 - Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation EP - 1359 IS - 7 SP - 1348 VL - 40 DO - 10.1111/jbi.12081 ER -
@article{ author = "Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo and Caldara, Roberto and Toševski, Ivo and Emerson, Brent C.", year = "2013", abstract = "Aim We test three alternative hypotheses for the disjunct Mediterranean-southern African distribution of endophagous weevils within the genera Rhinusa and Gymnetron (Coleoptera: Curculionidae): (1) a Palaearctic origin with dispersal to southern Africa; (2) a southern African origin with dispersal to the Palaearctic; and (3) a widespread ancestral distribution fragmented by vicariance. Divergence times are estimated to provide an approximate temporal framework for the evolution of the group and to evaluate potential palaeogeographical scenarios. Location Southern Africa, the Mediterranean region, the Palaearctic and eastern Africa. Methods Freshly collected and dry, pinned samples of weevils were used as a source of DNA. Prior genetic information was used to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons within the 16S ribosomal RNA gene (16S). Phylogenetic reconstructions using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data and molecular dating techniques were used to infer the biogeographical history of Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. A statistical approach to dispersal-vicariance analysis (s-diva) was used to further assess biogeographical hypotheses. Results Successful polymerase chain reaction amplification of targeted short 16S DNA sequences (150bp) from dry, pinned specimens provided for increased species sampling of Rhinusa and Gymnetron by 230%, greatly expanding species representation from southern Africa. Phylogenetic reconstructions and s-diva analyses support a southern African origin for Rhinusa and Gymnetron species. Divergence time estimates suggest southern African and Palaearctic lineages diverged c.11.6-7.4Ma. Main conclusions Rhinusa and Gymnetron represent a complex of lineages with a shared evolutionary history of range expansions from southern Africa into the Palaearctic. Our results support a late Miocene vicariance scenario, most likely as a result of repeated desertification. The use of prior genetic information to identify short phylogenetically informative amplicons offers a useful approach for molecular phylogenetic analyses incorporating archival material.", publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken", journal = "Journal of Biogeography", title = "Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation", pages = "1359-1348", number = "7", volume = "40", doi = "10.1111/jbi.12081" }
Hernandez-Vera, G., Caldara, R., Toševski, I.,& Emerson, B. C.. (2013). Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation. in Journal of Biogeography Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken., 40(7), 1348-1359. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12081
Hernandez-Vera G, Caldara R, Toševski I, Emerson BC. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation. in Journal of Biogeography. 2013;40(7):1348-1359. doi:10.1111/jbi.12081 .
Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo, Caldara, Roberto, Toševski, Ivo, Emerson, Brent C., "Molecular phylogenetic analysis of archival tissue reveals the origin of a disjunct southern African-Palaearctic weevil radiation" in Journal of Biogeography, 40, no. 7 (2013):1348-1359, https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12081 . .