| Literature DB >> 36166180 |
Chenguang Feng1,2, Kun Wang2, Wenjie Xu2, Liandong Yang1, Kunyuan Wanghe3, Ning Sun1,4, Baosheng Wu2, Feixiang Wu5, Lei Yang6, Qiang Qiu2, Xiaoni Gan1, Yiyu Chen1,7, Shunping He8,9.
Abstract
Major historical events often trigger the rapid flourishing of a few lineages, which in turn shape established biodiversity patterns. How did this process occur and develop? This study provides a window into this issue. The endemic East Asian carps (EEAC) dominated the ichthyofauna of East Asia and exhibited a high degree of adaptation to monsoonal river-lake ecosystems. A series of evidence, including ecogeography, phylogenetics, and macroevolution, suggests that the EEAC is a lineage that arose with the East Asian monsoon and thrived intimately with subsequent monsoon activities. We further deduce the evolution of the EEAC and find that a range of historical events in the monsoon setting (e.g., marine transgression and regression and glacial-interglacial cycle) have further reshaped the distribution patterns of EEAC's members. Comparative genomics analyses reveal that introgressions during the initial period of EEAC radiation and innovations in the regulation of the brain and nervous system may have aided their adaptation to river-lake ecosystems in a monsoon setting, which boosted radiation. Overall, this study strengthens knowledge of the evolutionary patterns of freshwater fishes in East Asia and provides a model case for understanding the impact of major historical events on the evolution of biota.Entities:
Keywords: Xenocyprididae; adaptive radiation; east Asian monsoon; genomes; macroevolution; phylogenomics
Year: 2022 PMID: 36166180 DOI: 10.1007/s11427-022-2141-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci China Life Sci ISSN: 1674-7305 Impact factor: 10.372