| Literature DB >> 25948684 |
Xin Xu1, Fengxiang Liu1, Ren-Chung Cheng2, Jian Chen1, Xiang Xu3, Zhisheng Zhang4, Hirotsugu Ono5, Dinh Sac Pham6, Y Norma-Rashid7, Miquel A Arnedo8, Matjaž Kuntner9, Daiqin Li10.
Abstract
Living fossils are lineages that have retained plesiomorphic traits through long time periods. It is expected that such lineages have both originated and diversified long ago. Such expectations have recently been challenged in some textbook examples of living fossils, notably in extant cycads and coelacanths. Using a phylogenetic approach, we tested the patterns of the origin and diversification of liphistiid spiders, a clade of spiders considered to be living fossils due to their retention of arachnid plesiomorphies and their exclusive grouping in Mesothelae, an ancient clade sister to all modern spiders. Facilitated by original sampling throughout their Asian range, we here provide the phylogenetic framework necessary for reconstructing liphistiid biogeographic history. All phylogenetic analyses support the monophyly of Liphistiidae and of eight genera. As the fossil evidence supports a Carboniferous Euramerican origin of Mesothelae, our dating analyses postulate a long eastward over-land dispersal towards the Asian origin of Liphistiidae during the Palaeogene (39-58 Ma). Contrary to expectations, diversification within extant liphistiid genera is relatively recent, in the Neogene and Late Palaeogene (4-24 Ma). While no over-water dispersal events are needed to explain their evolutionary history, the history of liphistiid spiders has the potential to play prominently in vicariant biogeographic studies.Entities:
Keywords: ancestral areas; dispersal; genetic diversity; living fossils; plesiomorphies; vicariance
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25948684 PMCID: PMC4455790 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.2486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349