Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals

It is now rare to find a semi-aquatic organism group with which to vigorously test whether their diversification model and distribution pattern are closely related to the Cenozoic temperature variation. This hypothesis is explored for water striders of the genera Aquarius Schellenberg, Gerris Fabric...

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Published in:Systematic Entomology
Main Authors: Ye, Zhen, Zhen, Yahui, Damgaard, Jakob, Chen, Pingping, Zhu, Lin, Zheng, Chenguang, Bu, Wenjun
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/biogeography-and-diversification-of-holarctic-water-striders(d9542dd3-d93c-4362-b591-9c9bbd9d4f9d).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274
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spelling ftcopenhagenunip:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/d9542dd3-d93c-4362-b591-9c9bbd9d4f9d 2024-04-28T08:14:33+00:00 Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals Ye, Zhen Zhen, Yahui Damgaard, Jakob Chen, Pingping Zhu, Lin Zheng, Chenguang Bu, Wenjun 2018 https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/biogeography-and-diversification-of-holarctic-water-striders(d9542dd3-d93c-4362-b591-9c9bbd9d4f9d).html https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Ye , Z , Zhen , Y , Damgaard , J , Chen , P , Zhu , L , Zheng , C & Bu , W 2018 , ' Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders : Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals ' , Systematic Entomology , vol. 43 , no. 1 , pp. 19-30 . https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274 article 2018 ftcopenhagenunip https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274 2024-04-04T17:35:12Z It is now rare to find a semi-aquatic organism group with which to vigorously test whether their diversification model and distribution pattern are closely related to the Cenozoic temperature variation. This hypothesis is explored for water striders of the genera Aquarius Schellenberg, Gerris Fabricius and Limnoporus Stål, which comprise a monophyletic clade with primarily Holarctic distribution. We sample almost 90% of the currently recognized Aquarius, Gerris and Limnoporus species. Five DNA fragments from 62 species are used to reconstruct a phylogram. Divergence time is estimated using Bayesian relaxed-clock method and three fossil calibrations. We investigate diversification dynamics, biogeography and ancestral state reconstruction by using maximum-likelihood, Bayesian and parsimony approaches. Our results showed that the crown of the three genera originated and underwent an initial diversification in Asia at 72 Ma (HPD: 59–86 Ma) in the Late Cretaceous, subsequently expanding into other regions via dispersal. The Bering Land Bridge was the major migration route between Eurasia and North America but was interrupted before the early Oligocene (34 Ma). Ancestors most likely used lentic habitats, and a minimum of two independent shifts to lotic habitats occurred in the initial diversification. Cenozoic temperature variation regulated the evolutionary history of Holarctic water striders of the genera Aquarius, Gerris and Limnoporus. Temperature warming during Stage I (52–66 Ma) was associated with the disappearance of shallow lentic habitats; this phenomenon forced certain lentic lineages to colonize new lotic habitats and promoted the diversification of lineages. Temperature cooling during Stage II (after 34 Ma) was associated with the fragmentation of water habitats of the ‘mixed-mesophytic’ belt, resulting in the extinction of historical taxa and influencing close lineages that shaped the present disjunct Eurasian–North American distribution. Article in Journal/Newspaper Bering Land Bridge University of Copenhagen: Research Systematic Entomology 43 1 19 30
institution Open Polar
collection University of Copenhagen: Research
op_collection_id ftcopenhagenunip
language English
description It is now rare to find a semi-aquatic organism group with which to vigorously test whether their diversification model and distribution pattern are closely related to the Cenozoic temperature variation. This hypothesis is explored for water striders of the genera Aquarius Schellenberg, Gerris Fabricius and Limnoporus Stål, which comprise a monophyletic clade with primarily Holarctic distribution. We sample almost 90% of the currently recognized Aquarius, Gerris and Limnoporus species. Five DNA fragments from 62 species are used to reconstruct a phylogram. Divergence time is estimated using Bayesian relaxed-clock method and three fossil calibrations. We investigate diversification dynamics, biogeography and ancestral state reconstruction by using maximum-likelihood, Bayesian and parsimony approaches. Our results showed that the crown of the three genera originated and underwent an initial diversification in Asia at 72 Ma (HPD: 59–86 Ma) in the Late Cretaceous, subsequently expanding into other regions via dispersal. The Bering Land Bridge was the major migration route between Eurasia and North America but was interrupted before the early Oligocene (34 Ma). Ancestors most likely used lentic habitats, and a minimum of two independent shifts to lotic habitats occurred in the initial diversification. Cenozoic temperature variation regulated the evolutionary history of Holarctic water striders of the genera Aquarius, Gerris and Limnoporus. Temperature warming during Stage I (52–66 Ma) was associated with the disappearance of shallow lentic habitats; this phenomenon forced certain lentic lineages to colonize new lotic habitats and promoted the diversification of lineages. Temperature cooling during Stage II (after 34 Ma) was associated with the fragmentation of water habitats of the ‘mixed-mesophytic’ belt, resulting in the extinction of historical taxa and influencing close lineages that shaped the present disjunct Eurasian–North American distribution.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ye, Zhen
Zhen, Yahui
Damgaard, Jakob
Chen, Pingping
Zhu, Lin
Zheng, Chenguang
Bu, Wenjun
spellingShingle Ye, Zhen
Zhen, Yahui
Damgaard, Jakob
Chen, Pingping
Zhu, Lin
Zheng, Chenguang
Bu, Wenjun
Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
author_facet Ye, Zhen
Zhen, Yahui
Damgaard, Jakob
Chen, Pingping
Zhu, Lin
Zheng, Chenguang
Bu, Wenjun
author_sort Ye, Zhen
title Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
title_short Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
title_full Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
title_fullStr Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
title_full_unstemmed Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders:Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
title_sort biogeography and diversification of holarctic water striders:cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals
publishDate 2018
url https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/biogeography-and-diversification-of-holarctic-water-striders(d9542dd3-d93c-4362-b591-9c9bbd9d4f9d).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274
genre Bering Land Bridge
genre_facet Bering Land Bridge
op_source Ye , Z , Zhen , Y , Damgaard , J , Chen , P , Zhu , L , Zheng , C & Bu , W 2018 , ' Biogeography and diversification of Holarctic water striders : Cenozoic temperature variation, habitat shifting and multiple intercontinental dispersals ' , Systematic Entomology , vol. 43 , no. 1 , pp. 19-30 . https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/syen.12274
container_title Systematic Entomology
container_volume 43
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op_container_end_page 30
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