Literature DB >> 34818432

Similar pattern, different paths: tracing the biogeographical history of Megaloptera (Insecta: Neuropterida) using mitochondrial phylogenomics.

Yunlan Jiang1, Lu Yue1, Fan Yang1,2, Jessica P Gillung3,4, Shaun L Winterton3, Benjamin W Price5, Atilano Contreras-Ramos6, Fumio Hayashi7, Ulrike Aspöck8,9, Horst Aspöck10, David K Yeates11, Ding Yang1, Xingyue Liu1.   

Abstract

The sequential breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea since the Middle Jurassic is one of the crucial factors that has driven the biogeographical patterns of terrestrial biotas. Despite decades of effort searching for concordant patterns between diversification and continental fragmentation among taxonomic groups, increasing evidence has revealed more complex and idiosyncratic scenarios resulting from a mixture of vicariance, dispersal and extinction. Aquatic insects with discreet ecological requirements, low vagility and disjunct distributions represent a valuable model for testing biogeographical hypotheses by reconstructing their distribution patterns and temporal divergences. Insects of the order Megaloptera have exclusively aquatic larvae, their adults have low vagility, and the group has a highly disjunct geographical distribution. Here we present a comprehensive phylogeny of Megaloptera based on a large-scale mitochondrial genome sequencing of 99 species representing >90% of the world genera from all major biogeographical regions. Molecular dating suggests that the deep divergence within Megaloptera pre-dates the breakup of Pangaea. Subsequently, the intergeneric divergences within Corydalinae (dobsonflies), Chauliodinae (fishflies) and Sialidae (alderflies) might have been driven by both vicariance and dispersal correlated with the shifting continent during the Cretaceous, but with strikingly different and incongruent biogeographical signals. The austral distribution of many corydalids appears to be a result of colonization from Eurasia through southward dispersal across Europe and Africa during the Cretaceous, whereas a nearly contemporaneous dispersal via northward rafting of Gondwanan landmasses may account for the colonization of extant Eurasian alderflies from the south.
© 2021 The Willi Hennig Society.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34818432     DOI: 10.1111/cla.12494

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cladistics        ISSN: 0748-3007            Impact factor:   4.714


  2 in total

1.  Mitochondrial phylogenomics provides insights into the taxonomy and phylogeny of fleas.

Authors:  Yu Zhang; Yi-Tian Fu; Chaoqun Yao; Yuan-Ping Deng; Yu Nie; Guo-Hua Liu
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 4.047

2.  Functions of Egg-Coating Substances Secreted by Female Accessory Glands in Alderflies, Fishflies and Dobsonflies (Megaloptera).

Authors:  Pei Yu; Xingyue Liu; Fumio Hayashi
Journal:  Insects       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 3.139

  2 in total

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