Historical biogeography of the widespread spider wasp tribe Aporini (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae)

Abstract Aim Our aim was to determine the age and area of origin of the genera of the Aporini tribe of spider wasps by studying its historical biogeography. We also tested the fit of several hypotheses concerning the processes underlying the widespread distribution of this group. Location The Holarc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Biogeography
Main Authors: Rodriguez, Juanita, Pitts, James P., von Dohlen, Carol D.
Other Authors: Riddle, Brett, Center for Women and Gender graduate student grant, National Science Foundation, Utah Agricultural Experiment Station
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12430
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fjbi.12430
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/jbi.12430
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Summary:Abstract Aim Our aim was to determine the age and area of origin of the genera of the Aporini tribe of spider wasps by studying its historical biogeography. We also tested the fit of several hypotheses concerning the processes underlying the widespread distribution of this group. Location The Holarctic and Neotropics. Methods A phylogeny of 44 Aporini taxa was produced through Bayesian inference using four nuclear molecular markers (elongation factor‐1 α F2 copy, long‐wavelength rhodopsin, wingless and the D2–D3 regions of the 28S ribosomal RNA ). A lognormal relaxed molecular clock, calibrated with ages from three fossils, was used to estimate lineage divergence times. Biogeographical processes were studied using three methods: statistical dispersal–vicariance analysis (S‐ DIVA ), dispersal–extinction cladogenesis ( DEC ) analysis and Bayesian binary Markov chain Monte Carlo ( BBM ) analysis. Results Our data suggest an origin for the most recent common ancestor of extant Aporini in the Nearctic region in the early Miocene, 22.6 Ma, with a confidence interval ( CI ) of 17.40–28.83 Ma. All genera originated in the Miocene, four in the Nearctic region. A constrained DEC analysis, where only dispersal to adjacent regions was allowed, produced the highest likelihood and was mostly congruent with the BBM results. Main conclusions Dispersal from the Nearctic region to the Palaearctic region probably occurred across the Bering land bridge in the early Miocene, 15–18 Ma ( CI = 11.14, 23.52), while three dispersal events to South America from Mesoamerica took place independently. These dispersals to South America occurred after 18 Ma through the Isthmus of Panama or across the Panama seaway. Three independent over‐water dispersal events to the Antilles occurred from Mesoamerica and the Nearctic for two Aporini genera. The patterns inferred within the biogeographical history of Aporini agree with several scenarios proposed for other unrelated taxa.