| Literature DB >> 27288482 |
Zhi-Yong Yuan1, Wei-Wei Zhou2, Xin Chen3, Nikolay A Poyarkov4, Hong-Man Chen2, Nian-Hong Jang-Liaw5, Wen-Hao Chou6, Nicholas J Matzke7, Koji Iizuka8, Mi-Sook Min9, Sergius L Kuzmin10, Ya-Ping Zhang2, David C Cannatella11, David M Hillis11, Jing Che2.
Abstract
True frogs of the genus Rana are widely used as model organisms in studies of development, genetics, physiology, ecology, behavior, and evolution. Comparative studies among the more than 100 species of Rana rely on an understanding of the evolutionary history and patterns of diversification of the group. We estimate a well-resolved, time-calibrated phylogeny from sequences of six nuclear and three mitochondrial loci sampled from most species of Rana, and use that phylogeny to clarify the group's diversification and global biogeography. Our analyses consistently support an "Out of Asia" pattern with two independent dispersals of Rana from East Asia to North America via Beringian land bridges. The more species-rich lineage of New World Rana appears to have experienced a rapid radiation following its colonization of the New World, especially with its expansion into montane and tropical areas of Mexico, Central America, and South America. In contrast, Old World Rana exhibit different trajectories of diversification; diversification in the Old World began very slowly and later underwent a distinct increase in speciation rate around 29-18 Ma. Net diversification is associated with environmental changes and especially intensive tectonic movements along the Asian margin from the Oligocene to early Miocene. Our phylogeny further suggests that previous classifications were misled by morphological homoplasy and plesiomorphic color patterns, as well as a reliance primarily on mitochondrial genes. We provide a phylogenetic taxonomy based on analyses of multiple nuclear and mitochondrial gene loci. [Amphibians; biogeography; diversification rate; Holarctic; transcontinental dispersal.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27288482 DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syw055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Biol ISSN: 1063-5157 Impact factor: 15.683