| Literature DB >> 27741308 |
Daniel Poveda-Martínez1,2, Chrystian C Sosa1,2,3, Katherine Chacón-Vargas1, Víctor Hugo García-Merchán1,2.
Abstract
Characidium is a Neotropical fish genus. Its distribution ranges from eastern Panama to northern Argentina, and it is an important component of the Neotropical ichthyofauna present in the major rivers of South America. We here provide an approximation to the dispersal and historical distributions of Characidium. The biogeographic history of five species of the genus was analyzed through nuclear RAG-2 and mitochondrial 16S genes and a time-calibrated phylogenetic analysis using three outgroup species. A biogeographical reconstruction was performed to estimate ancestral geographic ranges and infer the historical events that impacted the geographic distributions of Characidium species. Our results showed Characidium as a monophyletic group. The molecular clock suggests that the most recent common ancestor of Characidium originated during the Eocene, about 50.2 Mya. In addition, different dispersion and vicariance events could be inferred, which possibly gave rise to the present geographical distribution of the genus. Our results point to the rise of the Andean mountains and sea fluctuations as being important events in the formations and delimitation of different rivers, which influenced the distribution of South American ichthyofauna.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27741308 PMCID: PMC5065214 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Ichthyografical region and distribution of five species of Characidium.
Icthyogeografical region according to Vari and Malabarba [31] and Chiachio et al. [32] are A: Atlantic Coastal Drainage, B: Upper Parana basin, C: Uruguay basin and Coastal Drainage, D: Paraguay basin and Lower Parana, E: São Francisco basin and Drainages of Northeastern of Brazil, F: Amazon basin, G: Orinoco basin, and H: Coastal Drainage of Guyana. Blue lines show the principal waterbody of South America. The square shows the current distribution of the taxa considerer in this study.
Fig 2Time-calibrated phylogeny from BEAST analysis and reconstructed ancestral distributions from RASP.
This showing the interrelationship among species of Characidium and their divergence times. Numbers below branches are posterior probabilities obtained in the Bayesian Inference analysis. Each area is marked in colors that are seen in the pie charts node indicating the likelihood of occurrence in an ancient area (the codifications of these areas are in S1 Fig). On top of the pie charts the posterior probability of each tree node. The divergence time values (Mya) are in italics on the left side of the pie. A and B show the detail diagram of the center of origin of Characidium ancestor of the clade and their probabilities underlined. V and D represent vicariance or dispersion in each node.