| Literature DB >> 31881327 |
Jin-Min Chen1, Elizabeth Prendini2, Yun-He Wu3, Bao-Lin Zhang4, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom5, Hong-Man Chen4, Jie-Qiong Jin4, Emily Moriarty Lemmon6, Alan R Lemmon7, Bryan L Stuart8, Christopher J Raxworthy2, Robert W Murphy9, Zhi-Yong Yuan10, Jing Che11.
Abstract
Rhacophoridae are one of the most speciose and ecologically diverse families of amphibians. Resolution of their evolutionary relationships is key to understanding the accumulation of biodiversity, yet previous hypotheses based on Sanger sequencing exhibit much discordance amongst generic relationships. This conflict precludes the making of sound macroevolutionary conclusions. Herein, we conduct the first phylogenomic study using broad-scale sampling and sequences of 352 nuclear DNA loci obtained using anchored hybrid enrichment targeted sequencing. The robust time-calibrated phylogenetic hypothesis clarifies several long-disputed relationships and facilitates the testing of evolutionary hypotheses on spatiotemporal diversification and reproductive modes. The major extant lineages of Rhacophoridae appear to have radiated in mainland Asia, and the spatiotemporal process corresponds with several common accumulations of biodiversity in Asia. Analyses do not detect any case of "Out of Himalaya" in Rhacophoridae. All transitions of reproductive modes appear to have evolved in an ordered, gradual sequence associated with gaining independence of standing water for larval development. The different reproductive modes are phylogenetically conserved and the completion of their transitions appear to have occurred over a period of ~30 Ma, which does not fit a pattern of a rapid burst of diversification. Innovations in reproductive modes associate statistically with the uneven distribution of species-richness between clades, where higher diversification is linked to increased terrestrial modes of reproduction. These results strengthen the hypothesis that breeding innovations drive diversification by providing new opportunities for ecological release and dispersion.Entities:
Keywords: Biogeography; Diversification; Phylogenomics; Reproductive mode; Rhacophoridae; Systematics
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881327 DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2019.106724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Phylogenet Evol ISSN: 1055-7903 Impact factor: 4.286