Literature DB >> 23192838

Treating fossils as terminal taxa in divergence time estimation reveals ancient vicariance patterns in the palpimanoid spiders.

Hannah Marie Wood1, Nicholas J Matzke, Rosemary G Gillespie, Charles E Griswold.   

Abstract

Incorporation of fossils into biogeographic studies can have a profound effect on the conclusions that result, particularly when fossil ranges are nonoverlapping with extant ranges. This is the case in archaeid spiders, where there are known fossils from the Northern Hemisphere, yet all living members are restricted to the Southern Hemisphere. To better understand the biogeographic patterns of archaeid spiders and their palpimanoid relatives, we estimate a dated phylogeny using a relaxed clock on a combined molecular and morphological data set. Dating information is compared with treating the archaeid fossil taxa as both node calibrations and as noncontemporaneous terminal tips, both with and without additional calibration points. Estimation of ancestral biogeographic ranges is then performed, using likelihood and Bayesian methods to take into account uncertainty in phylogeny and in dating. We find that treating the fossils as terminal tips within a Bayesian framework, as opposed to dating the phylogeny based only on molecular data with the dates coming from node calibrations, removes the subjectivity involved in assigning priors, which has not been possible with previous methods. Our analyses suggest that the diversification of the northern and southern archaeid lineages was congruent with the breakup of Pangaea into Laurasia and Gondwanaland. This analysis provides a rare example, and perhaps the most strongly supported, where a dated phylogeny confirms a biogeographical hypothesis based on vicariance due to the breakup of the ancient continental plates.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23192838     DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/sys092

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Syst Biol        ISSN: 1063-5157            Impact factor:   15.683


  54 in total

1.  A living fossil tale of Pangaean biogeography.

Authors:  Jerome Murienne; Savel R Daniels; Thomas R Buckley; Georg Mayer; Gonzalo Giribet
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2013-11-27       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Convergence, divergence, and parallelism in marine biodiversity trends: Integrating present-day and fossil data.

Authors:  Shan Huang; Kaustuv Roy; James W Valentine; David Jablonski
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-04-21       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  The future of the fossil record: Paleontology in the 21st century.

Authors:  David Jablonski; Neil H Shubin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-04-21       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Extant primitively segmented spiders have recently diversified from an ancient lineage.

Authors:  Xin Xu; Fengxiang Liu; Ren-Chung Cheng; Jian Chen; Xiang Xu; Zhisheng Zhang; Hirotsugu Ono; Dinh Sac Pham; Y Norma-Rashid; Miquel A Arnedo; Matjaž Kuntner; Daiqin Li
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-06-07       Impact factor: 5.349

5.  The future of evolutionary diversity in reef corals.

Authors:  Danwei Huang; Kaustuv Roy
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-02-19       Impact factor: 6.237

6.  Hyainailourine and teratodontine cranial material from the late Eocene of Egypt and the application of parsimony and Bayesian methods to the phylogeny and biogeography of Hyaenodonta (Placentalia, Mammalia).

Authors:  Matthew R Borths; Patricia A Holroyd; Erik R Seiffert
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 2.984

7.  Time-calibrated models support congruency between Cretaceous continental rifting and titanosaurian evolutionary history.

Authors:  Eric Gorscak; Patrick M O'Connor
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 3.703

8.  Biogeographic Dating of Speciation Times Using Paleogeographically Informed Processes.

Authors:  Michael J Landis
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2017-03-01       Impact factor: 15.683

9.  The Efficacy of Consensus Tree Methods for Summarizing Phylogenetic Relationships from a Posterior Sample of Trees Estimated from Morphological Data.

Authors:  Joseph E O'Reilly; Philip C J Donoghue
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2018-03-01       Impact factor: 15.683

10.  A review of the Madagascan pelican spiders of the genera Eriauchenius O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1881 and Madagascarchaea gen. n. (Araneae, Archaeidae).

Authors:  Hannah M Wood; Nikolaj Scharff
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2017-01-11       Impact factor: 1.546

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