| Literature DB >> 33823805 |
Emmanuel F A Toussaint1, Lloyd T White2, Michael Balke3,4, Helena Shaverdo5, Athena Lam6,7,8, Suriani Surbakti9, Rawati Panjaitan10, Bob Sumoked11, Thomas von Rintelen12, Katayo Sagata13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The New Guinean archipelago has been shaped by millions of years of plate tectonic activity combined with long-term fluctuations in climate and sea level. These processes combined with New Guinea's location at the tectonic junction between the Australian and Pacific plates are inherently linked to the evolution of its rich endemic biota. With the advent of molecular phylogenetics and an increasing amount of geological data, the field of New Guinean biogeography begins to be reinvigorated.Entities:
Keywords: Beetle evolution; Dytiscidae paleogeography; Foja Gauttier Mountains; Island biogeography; Melanesia; Ultramafic rocks; Water beetle phylogenetics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33823805 PMCID: PMC8022562 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-021-01764-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol Evol ISSN: 2730-7182
Fig. 1Snapshot of landforms and habitat diversity of New Guinea. a High summits of the Central Range including Mount Trikora (Wilhelmina); b upper montane forest on the southern slopes of the Central Range below the summit region of Mount Mandala (Juliana); c montane forest at Syoubrig, Bird’s Head, uplifted Australian Plate affinity rocks, 1,400 m; d lowland forest stream on Papuan Ophiolite Belt, south of Nabire, 340 m; e foothill forest stream on Papuan Ophiolite Belt, south of Nabire, 770 m; f creek in upper montane forest of Central Range, uplifted Australian Plate affinity rocks (Ok Sibil area). All photographs by M. Balke.
Fig. 2Geography of New Guinea and sampling localities. Custom build map using ArcGIS v10.4 and a comprehensive collection of geological maps described in the Methods section. The principal geological features are color-coded, see legend of Fig. 2 and Additional file 1 for further details. ARF (Arfak Mts), WEY (Weyland Mts), GT (Gauttier Terrane or Foja Mts), CM (Cyclops Mts), BW (Bewani Mts), TOR (Toricelli Mts), ADL (Adelbert Mts), FIN (Finisterre Mts), IOB (Irian Ophiolite Belt), POB (Papuan Ophiolite Belt). Sampling localities of the Exocelina individuals, dots colored according to the underlying geological terrane (lower panel)
Summary of major biogeographic trends in different taxa and across New Guinea
| Taxon | Timing of early diversification in New Guinea | Area of early diversification | Early interaction Central Range/north coast areas? | Timing of Bird's Head colonization/diversification | Ancient diversification on or along "island arcs" (Proto Papuan Archipelago)? | Central Range as barrier causing N-S vicariance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schefflera, Shee et al. [ | Late Oligocene, ca. 26 Ma | "Woodlark", i.e. present day Eastern PNG Central Range/ | Possibly | Not clear, possibly from early Miocene, diversification from c. 5 Ma | Not clear | Late Oligocene, ca. 26 Ma |
| Diving beetles, this study | Early Miocene, ca. 17 Ma | Yes | Mid/late Miocene | Early interaction since late Miocene, ca. 11 Ma, diversification from 5 Ma | Possibly late Miocene, ca 8 Ma | |
| Mayflies (Corrarolo et al. 2019) | Eocene, ca. 40 Ma | Ambiguous: north coast region or southern lowlands | Yes | Late Oligocene/mid Miocene | Not applicable | Not clear |
| Ants, Janda et al. [ | Mid-late Miocene 13–5 Ma | Unclear | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | No |
| Damselflies, Kalkman et al. [ | Not dated | Possibly | Not clear | Possibly | Not clear | |
| Ground beetles, Liebherr [ | Not dated | ? Emerging Central Range | Possibly | Not applicable | Possibly | Yes |
| Aquatic bugs, Polhemus & Polhemus [ | Starting late Eocene–Oligocene based on geological evidence | Not applicable | Possibly | Early tertiary? | Yes | Not applicable |
| Microveliinae aquatic bugs, Polhemus & Polhemus [ | Late Oligocene—early Miocene, since 25 Ma | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | |
| Tree kangaroos, Eldridge et al. [ | Late Miocene, ca. 7 Ma | Australia | No | ? Late Miocene | No | Maybe, Pleistocene, ca. 2 Ma |
| Scincidae New Guinea skinks, Slavenko et al. [ | Mid Miocene, from ca. 14.4 Ma | Central Range/Papuan Peninsula | Mid Miocene, from ca. 11.6 Ma | Not applicable | No | No |
| Agamidae forest dragons, Tallowin et al. [ | Late Oligocene—early Miocene, since 23 Ma | Australian craton | Early-mid Miocene, from ca. 23–10 Ma | Mid Miocene, ca. 14 Ma | Yes | Possibly late Miocene-Pleistocene |
| Frogs, Rivera et al. [ | Late Oligocene to early Miocene, ca. 25-20 Ma | N Australian plate margin/Central Range | Possibly | Possibly | Possibly | Possibly |
| Lizards, Oliver et al. [ | Early Oligocene, ca. 30 Ma | Early Miocene, ca. 22 Ma | Late Miocene ca. 10 Ma | Yes | Not clear | |
| Early Miocene, ca. 24 Ma | Southern New Guinea/north coast ranges/from mid Miocene | From early Miocene ca. 22 Ma | Late Miocene ca. 10 Ma | Yes | Not clear | |
| Green python, Natusch et al. [ | Not applicable | Not applicable | not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Yes, starting late Miocene ca. 6–3 Ma |
| Microhylid frog, Oliver et al. [ | Not dated | Possibly | Not applicable | No | Check | |
| Microhylid frog, Oliver et al. [ | Early Miocene, ca. 17 Ma | Central Range | Early-mid Miocene, from ca. 17–10 Ma | Not applicable | Not applicable | Yes, late Miocene ca. 10 Ma |
| Catbirds, Irestedt et al. [ | Late Miocene, 10 Ma | Australia or proto-New Guinea | Not applicable | Late Miocene/Pleistocene | Not applicable | Yes, late Miocene, ca 6 Ma to Pliocene |
| Freshwater turtle, Georges et al. [ | Early Miocene, ca. 19 Ma | ? NG southern lowlands | Not applicable | Mid Miocene | Not applicable | Yes, early Miocene, ca 17 Ma |
| Freshwater turtle, Todd et al. [ | Late Miocene, 10–7 Ma | ? N Australia/? NG southern lowlands | Not applicable | Late Miocene | Not applicable | Yes, late Miocene, ca 6 Ma |
| Corvoid birds, Jønsson et al. [ | Late Eocene, ca. 40 Ma | Proto Papuan Archipelago | Not applicable | Not applicable | Yes, late Eocene | Not applicable |
| Passerine birds, Aggerbeck et al. [ | Early Oligocene, ca. 32 Ma | Australia/New Guinea | Not clear | Not applicable | Yes | Not applicable |
| Fruit doves, Cibois et al. [ | Early Oligocene, ca. 32 Ma | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Lories and lorikeets, Schweizer et al. [ | Late Miocene ca. 10 Ma | Proto Papuan Archipelago | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Songbrids, Moyle et al. [ | Mid Miocene, ca. 15 Ma | Australia | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Crowned pigeons, Bruxaux et al. [ | Late Miocene ca. 5 Ma, root goes back to early Miocene | Not applicable | No | Between late Miocene ca. 5 Ma and Pleistocene | No | Yes, between late Miocene ca. 5 Ma and Pleistocene |
| Rainbow fish, Unmack et al. [ | Early Oligocene, ca. 30 Ma | Not applicable | Not applicable | Early Oligocene, ca. 32 Ma | Yes | Not clear, north/south vicariance dated at 27.0 Ma |
Explanation of the scheme that was used to classify particular regions of the geological map to a particular terrane
| Geological terrane | Description |
|---|---|
| Uplifted Australian Plate affinity | Rocks that are Miocene or older and have always been or were once part of the Australian Plate |
| Transitional | Metamorphic rocks—typically of Cretaceous age. Note however, these typically have poor age control and more often than not were classified on the basis that these are deformed/metamorphic rock |
| Mesozoic ultramafic rocks | Refers to Cretaceous or older ultramafic rocks |
| Accreted Pacific Plate affinity | Cretaceous to Early Miocene mafic volcanic rocks that likely accreted to New Guinea's northern margin during the Cretaceous, or during the Eocene–Oligocene. This classification contains some ultramafic rock |
| Post collisional volcanics and intrusives | Refers to volcanic and plutonic rocks that are Miocene age or younger |
| Miocene or younger rocks that overlie Pacific Plate | Refers to sedimentary rocks and carbonates that are Miocene or younger that overlie what was once likely part of the Pacific Plate (and therefore assumed to also be representative of the ‘Accreted Pacific Plate affinity’ category) |
| Pliocene or younger rocks that overlie the Australian Plate | Refers to sedimentary rocks and carbonates that are Pliocene or younger that overlie what is or was once part of the Australian Plate (and therefore assumed to also be representative of the ‘Uplifted Australian Plate affinity’ category) |
Fig. 3Bayesian divergence time estimates of Exocelina diving beetles. Chronogram presenting median ages across New Guinean Exocelina derived from the best BEAST analyses based on MLE comparisons (12 uncorrelated lognormal relaxed clocks with a birth–death tree model). 95% credibility intervals are given in purple horizontal rectangles. Branch support derived from the best IQ-TREE ML tree search is given (SH-aLRT/UFBoot). A summary of the BAMM analyses is inserted in the bottom left corner of the figure showing a decrease in speciation rate through time.
Comparison of BEAST analyses using marginal likelihood estimates
| Analysis | Clocks | Tree model | SS MLE | PS MLE | Crown Copelatinae | Crown | Crown NG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 2 | Yule | − 68127.998 | − 68127.821 | 100.16 (81.05–116.80) | 49.31 (38.41–60.43) | 20.57 (14.28–23.07) |
| A2 | 2 | Birth death | − 68096.052 | − 68096.531 | 92.84 (74.25–111.88) | 39.16 (29.93–49.40) | 14.78 (11.15–18.79) |
| A3 | 12 | Yule | − 67442.242 | − 67437.208 | 99.39 (82.36–116.47) | 53.88 (43.43–63.25) | 20.97 (16.84–25.22) |
| A4 | 12 | Birth death | − 67417.937 | − 67414.115 | 92.63 (75.59–110.38) | 46.00 (37.19–55.83) | 17.06 (13.53–20.98) |
Fig. 4Maximum likelihood ancestral state estimation for geology coding
Fig. 5Maximum likelihood ancestral state estimation for geography coding. Inlay map shows the regions coded for the analysis, numbered nodes are discussed in the text; the maps to the right of the terminals visualize the distribution of a single species (one arrow) or a clade of species (two arrows or node number), the dot color corresponds to color code of geographic area.
Fig. 6Graphical summary of major biogeographic processes inferred in the present paper. Note, the length and position of arrows indicates simplified processes, length and direction generalized
Results the diversification analyses conducted on the New Guinean Exocelina radiation
| Model | Param, | Log Likelihood | AICc | ΔAIC | λ | α | μ | β | K |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BCST | 1 | − 358,847 | 719,723 | 5,892 | 0,2405 | – | – | – | – |
| BCSTDCST | 2 | − 358,847 | 721,780 | 7,949 | 0,2405 | – | 0 | – | – |
| BTimeVar_EXPO | 2 | − 358,584 | 721,254 | 7,423 | 0,2241 | 0,01626 | – | – | – |
| BTimeVarDCST_EXPO | 3 | − 358,584 | 723,342 | 9,511 | 0,224 | 0,01629 | 0 | – | – |
| BCSTDTimeVar_EXPO | 3 | − 358,847 | 723,868 | 10,037 | 0,2405 | – | 0 | 0,012 | – |
| BTimeVarDTimeVar_EXPO | 4 | − 358,584 | 725,460 | 11,629 | 0,2241 | 0,01628 | 0 | 0,03216 | – |
| BTimeVar_LIN | 2 | − 358,634 | 721,355 | 7,524 | 0,2236 | 0,00395 | NA | – | – |
| BTimeVarDCST_LIN | 3 | − 358,634 | 723,442 | 9,611 | 0,2235 | 0,00396 | 0 | – | – |
| BCSTDTimeVar_LIN | 3 | − 358,891 | 723,955 | 10,124 | 0,2402 | – | 0 | 0 | – |
| BTimeVarDTimeVar_LIN | 4 | − 352,770 | 713,831 | – | 0,0138 | 0,46044 | 0,35132 | 0,40155 | – |
| DDL | 2 | − 358.622 | 721.331 | 7.5 | 0.273 | – | – | – | 786.86 |
| DDL + E | 3 | − 358.526 | 723.226 | 9,395 | 0.3614 | – | 0.07543 | – | 375.61 |
| DDX + E | 3 | − 358.578 | 723.329 | 9,498 | 0.5011 | – | 0.0474 | – | Inf |
| DDL + EL | 4 | − 358.532 | 725.355 | 11,524 | 0.3391 | – | 0.05839 | – | 426.98 |
Param number of parameters in each model, ΔAICc the difference of AICc between any model and the best scoring model (i.e., BTimeVarDTimeVar_LIN), λ speciation rate at present, α dependency of speciation rate on time time (positive value indicates a slowdown of speciation rate, negative value indicates an acceleration of speciation rate), μ extinction rate at present, β dependency of extinction rate on time (positive value indicates a slowdown of extinction rate, negative value indicated an acceleration of extinction rate), K carrying capacity (species richness) estimated for diversity-dependent models