Hylinae ...

Holarctic Hylinae The predominantly Eurasian Hyla split from the predominantly North American Dryophytes in the Miocene, 22.6 Mya, with the former genus dispersing throughout Eurasia. Subsequent aridification of much of central Asia resulted there in a western clade of eight species of Hyla in what...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Duellman, William E., Marion, Angela B., Hedges, Blair
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5458575
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.5458575
Description
Summary:Holarctic Hylinae The predominantly Eurasian Hyla split from the predominantly North American Dryophytes in the Miocene, 22.6 Mya, with the former genus dispersing throughout Eurasia. Subsequent aridification of much of central Asia resulted there in a western clade of eight species of Hyla in what is now Europe and southwestern Asia and a farremoved eastern clade in temperate and subtropical southeastern Asia. Also in the mid-Miocene 15.4 (13.6–17.3) Mya, the clade that remained in North America differentiated genetically, and evolved into what is recognized as Dryophytes, which occurs throughout temperate eastern North America. Our analysis shows that a stock of Dryophytes dispersed westward across the Bering Land Bridge to Asia in the late Miocene 8.7 (6.6–10.9) Mya. This stock differentiated into three species in eastern Asia (including Japan), the Dryophytes immaculatus Group. The closest relatives of this group, the Dryophytes eximius Group, principally inhabited the pine forests from southwestern ... : Published as part of Duellman, William E., Marion, Angela B. & Hedges, Blair, 2016, Phylogenetics, classification, and biogeography of the treefrogs (Amphibia: Anura: Arboranae), pp. 1-109 in Zootaxa 4104 (1) on pages 56-57, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4104.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265809 ...